Geography 1: Living In A Changing World (Half Course) GEOG1007

  • Academic Session: 2024-25
  • School: School of Geographical and Earth Sciences
  • Credits: 20
  • Level: Level 1 (SCQF level 7)
  • Typically Offered: Semester 1
  • Available to Visiting Students: No
  • Collaborative Online International Learning: No

Short Description

Level 1 Geography course introducing human, physical and environmental geographies.

Timetable

Lectures - 11.00 or 16.00 Tuesday to Thursday; 

Practical classes - include block-structured laboratories (5 in S1) and workshops (5 in S1). Labs are two hours in duration; workshops are one hour in duration.

Requirements of Entry

This is the 20 credit early exit version of the full Geography 1 course (GEOG1001).

Assessment

Continuous assessment in the form of Moodle quizzes associated with each of the three blocks that course content is organised around (40%). one class essay (40%). Laboratory assessment including oral presentations (20%)

Course Aims

To introduce students through lectures, tutorials and essay work to the nature of:

■ human geography: issues of development and underdevelopment; identity, connections and social relations;

■ physical geography: aspects of climatology, geomorphology, hydrology and biogeography, as interacting environmental elements in the past and present;

■ human and physical inter-relations: climate change, biodiversity, resources and sustainability;

■ key skills in geographical analysis through basic data collection, interpretation and presentation.

Intended Learning Outcomes of Course

Subject specific learning outcomes:

At the completion of the course students should be able to:

■ explain the inter-relation of processes in physical and human geography that produce our changing world;

■ describe key concepts (scale, connection, resources, systems and environment) and explain their importance in developing a geographical awareness;

■ effectively employ new skills in geographical data collection and interpretation, and cartographic representation.

 

Transferable skill learning outcomes:
At the completion of the course students should have developed the following skills:

■ oral presentation and teamwork skills;

■ the ability to construct a written critical argument based on library-based research and conforming to academic conventions in terms of citations and referencing;

■ numeracy, and the ability to handle quantitative data;

■ the ability to work to deadlines.

Minimum Requirement for Award of Credits

  Attendance at practical classes and workshops