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Looking forward Looking forward to the to the new A levels new A levels Bob Digby University College School, London

Looking forward to the new A levels

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Looking forward to the new A levels. Bob Digby University College School, London. Acknowledgments and thanks to:. Subject officers at the 4 main English and Welsh subject boards; Sue Warn, for insight into candidate numbers post-16; - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

Looking forward Looking forward to the to the

new A levelsnew A levels

Bob Digby

University College School, London

Page 2: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

Acknowledgments and thanks to:

– Subject officers at the 4 main English and Welsh subject boards;

– Sue Warn, for insight into candidate numbers post-16; – Simon Oakes for the use of his research into HEI

attitudes towards school geography; – Matt Gregory at Edexcel for the use of Edexcel research; – The GA and the RGS for their positioning statements

regarding Geography and its status; – The RGS for their annual analysis about candidate

numbers in Geography

Page 3: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

1. Where we are now– Revisions to the new A levels for the first time since

2000 – More than just new specifications – an expression of

the subject for the next few years– Time scale: submission now, approval June, in

schools September 07, first teaching 2008, first AS/A2 awards in 2009/2010

– Compliance with QCA subject criteria e.g. ‘stretch and challenge’

– One specification per Board, and the implications of that. The death of specifications with low take-up e.g. OCR B?

– 4 modules not 6; when will candidates take these?

Page 4: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

2. Questions – Will change actually reduce the burden of assessment?

Or will the Boards shoe-horn 6 modules into 4?– No coursework permitted: will this impact upon the

number of candidates in Geography?– What happens to fieldwork? How will the different

Boards preserve fieldwork as an integral part of Geography?

– How far has the introduction of AS/A2 and modularity benefited Geography?

– Time to reflect - what have been the advantages and disadvantages of the present system?

– We now have a generation of exam-wise 16-18 year-olds – but are they better geographers?

Page 5: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

Decline in Geographycandidates at GCSE2000-2006

Now 8th most popular subject at GCSE in England and Wales(though 5th in Wales itself)

3. Where have all the Geographers gone?

Page 6: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

Decline in A levelGeography Candidates 1989 - 2006

The 9th most popular at A2

Page 7: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

Subject Ra n k a t AS

Ra n k a t A2

Engl ish 1 1

Ge n e ral St u d ie s 2 2

Maths 5 3

Bio logy 4 4

His t ory 7 5

Ps ych ology 3 6

Art an d De s ign 6 7

Ch em is try 8 8

Ge o gr a p h y 12 9

Med ia St u d ies 9 10

Ph ys ics 13 11

S ocia l S cie nc e 11 12

PE 14 13

Te chn o logy S u bj e ct s 16 14

Exp res sive Art s 19 15

But it increases into A2 - where retention is good

Geography’s popularity decreases from GCSE (8th) to AS (12th)

So - those who ‘get it’ enjoy it and stay with it

The problem is getting students on board in the first place - at age 14, then at 16

Page 8: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

4. Several factors in play– All specifications down except WJEC– Edexcel B is down by about nearly 2000 to 10000 a) The loss of large post-16 colleges; AS fieldwork requirements in year 12 a

big problem if you have 200 titles to arrange b) The loss of large colleges alone resulted in a loss of nearly 500 candidates

in this one specification c) Increases in fees. In my own school; AS units Edexcel B are double the

cost; about £1000/year on a 2 year cycle. In a large college, that’s one teacher.

– The ability to get modular marking and appeals right at an early stage in 2001, and the attitude of subject officers to this

– School location and catchment, particularly multi-ethnic schools and colleges, in which Geography is a non-option

– The impact of changes to KS3 and 4, particularly post-1996; the impact of falling GCSE numbers; numbers fell 10 000 between 1998 - 2002

Page 9: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

5. What’s the competition?– The move to IB, especially in independent and

traditional schools– Bigger range of subjects available - e.g. the

continued rise of psychology– Sexier subjects! Increase in candidates 2003-4: Media/Film/TV studies; 12.5%. Business and Communication Studies; 8.7%. Information and Communication Studies; 6/9%. Home Economics; 5.9%. – Vocational courses

Page 10: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

6. The Fieldwork problem– The removal of coursework; how will post-16

fieldwork survive? be assessed? – The issue of coursework and whether its

removal will be seen as a plus or a minus by students

– Fieldwork and examinations do not have a good track record; exam fieldwork questions tend to be predictable and routine

– Will schools and colleges preserve fieldwork as a part of the curriculum - or will it be ‘extra-curricular’?

Page 11: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

At AS – Edexcel Spec A Most popular and appropriate

At AS – Edexcel Spec B Most popular and appropriate

• Structured short answer questions

a) Structured short answer questions

• Skills exercises b) Skills exercises • Annotated diagrams c) Annotated diagrams • Extended prose d) Extended prose • Pre-released resources e.g.

issues analysis e) Centre marked (moderated)

coursework Least Popular and appropriate

Least Popular and appropriate

• Centre marked (moderated) coursework

• Full essays

• Multiple choice • One word answer quest ions • One word answer questions • Multiple choice

7. What kind of Assessment? •Will it matter if two specifications merge?•Edexcel researched teachers of the current Specifications A and B; what did they feel were the most appropriate means of assessment at AS?

Page 12: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

8. What kind of assessment?

At A2 – Spec A Most popular and appropriate

A2 Assessment – Spec B Most popular and appropriate

• Full essays • Extended prose • Skills exercises • Full essays • Extended prose • Research reports • Annotated diagrams • Pre-released resources eg

issues analysis • Pre-released resources eg

issues analysis • Skills exercises

Least popular

Least Popular

• Centre marked (moderated) coursework

• Centre marked (moderated) coursework

• Multiple choice • One word answer questions • One word answer questions • Multiple choice

Edexcel research at A2 into what schools thought was the most appropriate means of assessing candidates at A2

So - marrying two specifications should not present difficulties in terms of assessment style

Page 13: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

9. How far will the subject get a facelift in the new specifications?

Eleanor Rawling’s lecture at the 2005 conference highlighted ten concerns• Forces of change & public concerns about e.g. globalisation, global

warming• Spatial awareness of e.g. the ‘new’ Europe• Scale & scale linkage – inter-connectedness • Environmental Interaction – footprints and management• Technology – opportunities for GIS• Greater curriculum flexibility, choice & freedom needed• Special contribution to global concepts e.g. sustainability• Geographical enquiry – active questioning approach, less didactic• Significant changes in university geography (cultural, ethnographic,

place….)• ‘14-19 awarding bodies have tended to standardise content…fear that

innovation will lose customers anxious to play safe & maintain high grades’

Page 14: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

10. How should the subject be updated?

• The GA’s Action Plan and the curriculum work within the GA and the RGS

• Time for place-focused learning - NOT case studies!• Simon Oakes research into the School-HEI ‘Gap’

(2006) highlights several issues including: • Human geography in school ‘out of step’• Theory levels are poor (compare Sociology)• Learning tends to be ‘case-study based’, not theoretical

- focused on ‘facts, not thinking’• Little critical questioning of concepts - e.g. of

sustainability

Page 15: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

The new specificationsThe new specifications

• Content of AS versus A2• Assessment type at AS and A2• Styles and Flexibility of assessment• Assessment load• Where’s the fieldwork?• Guidance for teachers?• How fresh or up-to-date?• How much choice?

Page 16: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

What kind of content at AS?What kind of content at AS?Criteria AQA Ede xcel OCR WJEC AS content and we ighting

Unit 1 35 % Phys ic al an d Huma n Geography Two el e me nts • Physical (Rivers pl usone of Col dEnvironment ,s Coast alEnvironments or Ho tdese rts an dmargins)

• Human (Glob alpopulati on change pl usone of Food Supply Issue ,s Energy Supply Issues or Health Issues

Unit 2 15% Applied Geography Assesses skills (whic hmust include fieldwork) taught in Unit One

Unit 1 30% Global Challenges Tw o elements • World at Risk (Hazard sand Global Warmin )g

• Going Globa l(Population & Migratio )n

Unit 2 20% Geographic alInvestigations Fo ur elemen ;ts selec tone phys a nd on ehuman • Physical (Extreme Weather or Crowd edCoast )s

• Human (Uneq ualSpaces & Re-brandin g

)Places

Unit 1 25% Managing Physic alEnvironments Choice is n ot explicit – except throu gh t heassessme ntrequirements Either • River environments or • Coastal environments AND either • Cold environments or • Hota rid and semi-ari denvironments

Unit 2 25% Managi ng Chan ge i nHuman Environments Either • Managi ng urba nchange or

• Managi ng rural change AND either • The energy issue or • The growth of touris m

Unit 1 25% Changing Physic alEnvironments Tw o the :mes • Investigating climat echange

• Investigating tecto nicand hydrologic alchange

Unit 2 25% Changing Huma nEnvironments Tw o the :mes • Investigatin gpopulati on change

• Investigatin gsettlement change in MEDCs

Page 17: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

What kind of assessment at AS?What kind of assessment at AS?

Criteria AQA Edexc e l OCR WJEC Styl e of assessme nt at AS

Total 3 ho urs Unit 1: 2 ho urs Progre s sion fr om shor t to e xtende d written re s ponses Unit 2: 1 ho ur Structure d s kills question s , with fieldwork que s tion

Total 2.5 hours Unit 1: 1.5 h ours Resource -base d question s . Do all of Sectio n A an d B Unit 2: 1 ho ur Do 2 from 4 es s ay-style que s tions (wit h part s a , b a nd c) on them e s taugh t in Unit 2

Total 3 ho urs Units 1 a nd 2: 1.5 hours ea c h • Section A Twostructured da tarespons equestions

• Section B on eextended writing

Total 3 hours Units 1 and 2: 1.5 hours each • Structured da tarespons equestions on eac htheme

• Question o nresearch and out-of-classroom work,

includingfieldwor k in relation to eac h

theme.

Page 18: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

What kind of content at A2? Unit 3What kind of content at A2? Unit 3Criteria AQA Edexcel OCR WJEC A2 c ontent and weighting Unit 3

Unit 3 30% Conte mporary Geogra phical Issues Focus e s on a range of themes, for research Se lect three ; one physi cal and one hum a n minimum Physi c al • Plate tectonics • Weather andC limatea nd hazards

• Challenges fac ingecosystems

Human • WorldCities • Development and Globalisation

• Contemporary conflict and challenge

3 30%Unit Contested Planet.

Focus on use and management of

, resources and iss uesarisin :g • EnergySecurity • Water conflicts • Biodiversity under threat

• Superpower geographies

• Bridging the development gap

• The technological ?fix

3 Unit 30%

Global Issues

Three chosen from :six Environmental :issues • Earth hazards • Ecosystems and

environments under threat

• Climatic hazards Economic :issues • Population and

resources • Globalisation • Development and

inequalities

3 30%Unit Contemporary Themes & Research in Geography

Section A Contemporary Themes

Choose one :from • Extreme environments • Landforms and their management

• Climati c hazards andone from

• Development • Globalisation • Emerging Asia – India or China

Section B: Research Enquiry Board setsone investigative theme a year for each of these option :s

• Crime • Deprivation • Disease • Environmental Psychology • Leisureand Recreation • Microclimates • Pollution • Retailing • Rivers • Ecosystems

Page 19: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

What kind of content at A2? Unit 4What kind of content at A2? Unit 4

Criteria AQA Ede xcel OCR WJEC A2 c onte nt and we ighting Unit 4

Unit 4 20 % Either Unit 4A Geography Fie ldwork Inves tigation A 1.5 hour e xamination pa per ba s ed o n cand ida tes’ o wn individual fieldwork invest igat ion. The e xam focus es on eva luat ion. Or Unit 4B Geographic al Is s ue Evaluation A pre -rele ase b ooklet availa ble 2 months be fore the exa mina tion.

Unit 4 20 % Geographic al Res e arc h Te ac hers or ca ndidate s selec t a s pec ialism in one a re a: • Tectonic activity an dhazards

• Cold Environments – landscap es and change

• Life on the mar : gins thefood supply

problem • The wo rld of cultu raldiversity

• Pollution a nd huma nhealt h at risk

• Consuming the ru rallandscap e – leisur eand tourism

Unit 4 20% Geographical Skill • Identifyin g a suitabl egeographi cal questio nor hypothesis f orinvestigation

• Developing a pl anand strategy f orconducti ng th einvestigation

• Collecti ng an drecordi ng appropriat edata

• Presenting t he dat acollected i nappropriate forms

• Analysin g an dinterpreting t he data

Unit 4 20% Sustainability Four themes • Sustainable foo dsupply

• Sustainable wate rsupply

• Sustainable energy • Sustainable Cities

Page 20: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

What kind of assessment at A2?What kind of assessment at A2?Criteria AQA Ede xcel OCR WJEC Style o f as s es sm e nt at A2

Total 4 h ours Unit 3 2. 5 hou rs A progressi on from s hort stru ctured quest ions , to exte nded p a ragra phs , plus one es s ay Unit 4 1. 5 hou rs Either Unit 4A a 1.5 h our e xam eval uating candida tes’ fieldwork inve stigation. Or Unit 4B a 1.5 h our e xam on a pre-re lea s e iss ue anal ysis.

Total 4 h ours Unit 3 2. 5 hou rs. Includes p re-rele as e d synoptic re s ource mater ial 3 weeks before exam. Candida tes ans wer 2 exte nde d writte n que s tions from Secti on A (Contes ted Plane t) a nd all of B (Synoptic Investi gation) Unit 4 1. 5 hou rs. Cand ida tes ans wer one essa y on pre-re lea s ed the me.

Total 3 ho urs Unit 3 2 ho urs Secti on A: 3 st ructured que s tions requiring da ta res pons e, a nd exte nded writing. Secti on B: 2 es s ays Unit 4 1. 5 hou rs Secti on A: 2 quest ions to be done a bout diffe re nt s tages of their invest igat ion. Secti on B: 1 piece of res ource-ba s ed exte nded writing bas e d on proces s of ge ograph ical invest igat ion

Total 4 h ours Unit 3 2. 25 h ours 2 es s ays , one from eac h optiona l theme s tudie d one quest ion ba s ed on the individual res e arch en quiry from the findings of the p re-rele as e d topic a rea. Unit 4 1. 75 h ours Pre -rele as e d bo oklet cove ring combinat ion of some or all of the 4 the mes . S ynoptic Secti on A; candida tes dra w on othe r s tudie s from course.

Page 21: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

Progression in assessment AS to A2?Progression in assessment AS to A2?Criteria AQA Ede xcel OCR WJEC Style s of as s es sm e nt

Units 1 & 2 Pro gress ion from s hort to e xte nde d res pons es , include s skills quest ions Unit 3 P rogres sion stru ctured a nswe rs to essa y Unit 4 Analytical an d / or eva luative ex te nded writing dep e nding on choice

Unit 1 Res ource-bas ed stru ctured quest ions Unit 2 Es s ay Unit 3 Extende d res pons es plus synoptic iss ue a nalysis Unit 4 S ingle Exte nded Essa y

Unit 1 a nd 2 Pro gress ion from Secti on A (s tructure d da ta res pons e que s tions) to B (extende d writing) Unit 3 P rogres sion from s tructured ans wers to ess a ys Unit 4 Single pie ce of exte nded writing

Units 1 & 2 Res ource-bas ed; progressi on from short to e xte nde d res ponses Unit 3 Two ess ays and one quest ion ba s ed on the individual res e arch en quiry Unit 4 Extende d anal ytical writing

How is ‘stre tc h and c halle nge’ ac hieve d?

Clea r st a te me nt a bout use of op e n-ende d que s tions, an d highe r order st e ms – a nalys e, eval ua te e tc. – plus use of e xte nded writing

• Clear stateme ntabo ut use of open-end ed questio , nsand higher ord er

stems– analyse, evaluate et .c

• Use of extende dwriting

• ‘Improv ed synopti casses ’sment

By gener alsuggesti ons to tea chbeyond the concepts at

. AS

General referen ceabo ut differentiation.

Use of extende dwriting in U 3.nit Final question of U 4nit

Page 22: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

How much assessment? How flexible?How much assessment? How flexible?Criteria AQA Edexc e l OCR WJEC Total exam ination time ove r 2 years

7 hours

6.5 ho urs

6.5 ho urs

7 hours

Timing of A S units

Unit 1 and Unit 2 available in b oth exa m cycles

Unit 1 Janua ry and June Unit 2 Jun e

Not specifie d, but implies tha t bot h avail able in J a nuar y and Jun e .

Unit 1 and Unit 2 available in b oth exa m cycles

Timing of A2 units

Unit 3 and Unit 4 available in b oth exa m cycles

Unit 3 Ja n and June Unit 4 Jun e only

Not specifie d, but implies tha t bot h available in J a nuar y and Jun e .

Unit 3 and Unit 4 available in b oth exa m cycles

Pre -releas e materi als?

Yes , if Unit 4B is selecte d (6-8 wee ks ahead)

Yes , in ea ch of units 3 and 4 (3 wee ks ahead)

No Yes , Unit 4 (6 weeks ahead)

How is th e sy noptic elem e nt assesse d?

Ass e sse d thro ugh Units 3 a nd 4 – generic s ta teme nt rathe r tha n sp e cific refere nces

As a pa rt of Unit 3 – pre -release d resourc e anal ysis

Ass e sse d thro ugh Units 3 an d 4 – generic s ta teme nt rathe r tha n sp e cific refere nces

Ass e sse d in Units 3 and 4 ; sp e cific element s rela ted to synopt icity

Page 23: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

Where’s the fieldwork or research? Where’s the fieldwork or research?

Criteria AQA Edexc e l OCR WJEC How is fieldwo rk and inve sti g ative res earch app roached?

• Explicit requiremen t

forUni t 2 • In Uni 2, texaminatio nfieldwork forms basi sof Q2

• Explicit requiremen t

inspecification • Candidate sexpected t o u sefieldwork in Unit 2 examination

Recognise d a s a nelement o f teachin gUnits 1 an d 2, bu t n otprescribe d or form allyassessed

• Explicit requiremen t inspecification

• Integrated int oquestion sassessing Unit 1 sand 2, with on especific questio nfocuse d o nfieldwork

How i sfieldwork a ndinvestigativ eresearc happroach ?ed

Fieldwork isa n optio n

forUni t 4

Investigativ eresearch i n Uni 4.t Fieldwork migh tassis t dependin gupo n them e chose .n

Dedicated U 4nit

Fieldwork m ayb eessential for Uni t 3 dependin g upo ntheme selecte d b yBoar .d

Wher eassessed, can fieldwor k

or researc h be taken int o

the exa ?m

If Unit 4 a chosen, yes

No

No

Not state d b utassum e n .ot

Page 24: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

How much guidance is there for teachers? How much guidance is there for teachers?

Criteria AQA Edexc e l OCR WJEC Spe c ification Approach – conc eptual vs content, the matic or place

Generic a pproac h • Conte nt lists toprovide guida nceabout what should b etaught. These a reusually present ed asthemes o rcomponents of th emain units

Gen eric approach • Key Questions to focus the topic

• Key Ideas whic hprovide guidance

• Guidance f orteaching and learnin gto provi de focus o ntheme, pla ce an dscale, and sometimes how it mi ght be taugh t(e. .g stud entresearc )h

Gen eric approach • Questions to focu s

thetopic • Key Ideas whic hprovide guidance

• Guidance f orteaching and learnin g

toprovi de focus o ntheme, pla ce an dscale, and sometimes how it mi ght be taugh t(e. .g stud entresearc )h

Gen eric approach • Key Questions to focus the topic

• Content whic hprovides guidance fo rteaching and learnin g

toprovi de focus o ntheme, pla ce an dscale

• Illustrative example s ofresearch to hel pfocus teachi ng an dlearning

• Suggest edexamples which provides guidance o nplace and/or scale o rcurrent issues

• Links to other units, forcurriculum

mapping

Page 25: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

Criteria AQA Edexc e l OCR WJEC ‘Ne w’ approa c he s / conte nt / conce pts; incl us io n an d importanc e of conte mpora ry topic s ?

Conce pts • AS – Food andenergy supply,

Health(though no t new to this s )pec

• 2 A – Globalisation, Contemporar yconflicts an dchallenge s – ver y

open choice

Concepts • AS – globalisation, climate change, re-

branding places, unequal place s

and spaces • 2 A – new superpowers, energy security, water conflict, consumerism, technological fix.

• Biodiversity, no tecosystems

• Very up-to-dat eexemplars used i nGuidance

Concepts • AS – ener gyissues

• 2 A – Environment sunder threat, globalisation

Concepts • AS – climat echange, urba nprocess & chan ge in MEDC,

sustainability an d flood risks etc

• 2 A – Ne wSuperpowers; plu soptions .e g. Crime, Deprivation, Geography o fDisease, Environmenta lPsychology

• Unit4 fo cusexplicitly onsustainability

How fresh or up-to-date are the new specs? How fresh or up-to-date are the new specs?

Page 26: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

How much freedom of choice is there? How much freedom of choice is there?

Criteria AQA Edexc el OCR WJEC Options or compu lsor y?

Units 1 & 2 Core p lus ch oice of 1 from 3 Unit 3 Choi ce of 3 from 6 Unit 4 Choi ce of s tyle of as sessment; freedo m of choice if fie ldwork chosen in Unit 4a

Units 1 and 3 Compulso ry Unit 2 Choi ce of 2 from 4 Unit 4 Choi ce of 1 from 6

Unit 1 a nd 2 Choi ce of 2 from 4 in ea ch unit Unit 3 Choi ce of 3 from 6 Unit 4 Freedo m of cho ice of topic for fieldwork / invest iga tion

Units 1, 2 and 4 Compulso ry Unit 3 Choi ce in §A 2 from 6 Choi ce in §B made by WJEC

Page 27: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

Final thoughts? Final thoughts? Criteria AQA Edexc e l OCR WJEC Other re marks or fe ature s of no te

• An upda te fro m

the presen tspecification

• A lot of curriculu mchoice; choice inevery Unit.

• Probably th eshortes tspecification an dthe simples t to

. follow

• An explicit attemp tto merge tw ospecifications.

• A significan tupdate fro m thepresent Bspecification, wit hintegrate dconcepts an dconten t fro m the Aspecification

• Significant choice. • Explicit use o fthemes an dconcept s curren t

withinHEI. • Big o nsustainabilit .y

• Very up-to-dat eexemplars

• An explicit attemp tto merge tw ospecifications.

• Offers choice i nevery unit.

• Probably the mos ttraditiona lspecification i nappearance, bu t

does not ha ve to be taught in thi s.way

• An upda te fro m

the present with a loto f

contemporar yconcepts an dissues.

• More compulsor yconten t thanothers, bu t flexibl e

Unitsa t A2 reduc e this and give th e

feelingof choice. • Big o nsustainabilit .y

Page 28: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

11. What of the future? Strengths of the subject

– Strengths of the subject shown in RGS findings; numbers hold up once students are on board– but it is getting the students in the first place.

– Post-16 teaching is generally good, and remains better than at KS3

– At HEI, geographers retain their employability, and relatively few drop out or switch courses

– Teaching quality in HEI is very good

Page 29: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

12. What of the future? Weaknesses

– Geography is perceived as difficult / hard work by students in school. Different subjects make differing demands - my own students claim that responses in Economics require less explanation and content than Geography.

– Will coursework do us a favour in disappearing? At GCSE, geographical enquiries tend to be far more lengthy compared with e.g. requirements for History. Dos this put some students off?

– The continued encroachment of our own subject – e.g ‘An Inconvenient Truth’ used in English GCSE and Media Studies

Page 30: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

13. What of the future? Opportunities

– Is this the right time to for Exam Boards to present more of the same?

– Or should specifications create a new view and definition of geography for the 21st century?

– There is a market for traditional geography. But – it is worth reminding ourselves that the greatest growth in candidate numbers occurred the 1980s with the 16-19 syllabus. The risks in updating might be worth taking.

– A new generation is gradually replacing an ageing profession. What are recently qualified teachers best qualified to teach? Should we close further the gulf between school Geography and HEI?

Page 31: Looking forward  to the  new A levels

14. What of the future? Threats.

– Is difference between specifications OK?

– Do we want to be a subject that presents different interpretations of itself via different specifications? It’s not uncommon in other subjects!

– In selecting what should be taught, should we go for ‘popular’ themes? Historians have turned this into strength.

– The debate among geographers remains as ever – the pursuit of breadth? or depth? Traditional - or modern?

– Whatever we decide will live with us for the next 5-8 years. Let’s get it right!