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Geography: what is it for? Geography helps us explore and understand
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our world in a particular way. Geography is much more than just knowing where
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people and places are located on a map. Take the Olympics for example: We might investigate
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the location of participating countries and research their notable characteristics.
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But unless we consider the stories of these people and places we won't gain a deep understanding
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of what life is like in these countries and their place in the world.
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We need to question: Why do some countries have just a few competitors? Why do some excel
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at particular sports while others do not? Geography allows us to see the interconnections
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between people and places and use that understanding to inform our decisions for the future.
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So what is geography for? What drives geographers to be inquisitive about our world?
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Is it a desire to locate the amazing places of the world or is it this and more?
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As well as taking an interest in the world, thinking geographically develops an understanding
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that people and places don't exist in isolation but are interconnected.
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In geography these interconnections are explored and considered in spatial terms. Geography
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uses a range of modern technological tools to identify and explore the spaces of the
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world. Geographers are not only interested in where
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places are and their interconnections but also exploring the meaning of a place to people
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and its importance to their identity. When we look at the Australian Curriculum
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for geography we see that there are two interwoven strands: Geographical knowledge & understandings
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and Geographical inquiry and skills. Students view and analyse the world through
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the lens of the 7 geographical concepts: place, space, interconnection, sustainability,environment, scale, and change
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To develop geographical thinking both the
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content strands and the concepts need to be considered.
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So with this in mind let's think about a student in a South Australian school -- let's call
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her Karra. How might Karra's teacher interweave the 2
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strands of Geography so that Karra thinks geographically?
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We want Karra to know where places are on a map, to explore the nature of places, to
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understand why places are where they are, to analyse the impact places have on people
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and people have on places. When Karra hears that the sand dunes adjacent
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to her school have been identified by the transport department as a future park-and-ride
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location, we want her teacher to engage Karra to think geographically and empower her to
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influence the future of her world. As well as mapping the location we want Karra
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to use this proposed change as an opportunity to develop her own response using her geographical
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knowledge, skills and thinking. We want Karra to collect, represent and analyse
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data through the eyes of a geographer to develop her views on all possible options and actions
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for the future of these sand dunes. We want Karra to develop her capacity to be
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an active and informed citizen in her community and beyond by thinking geographically.
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By interweaving the key geographical concepts with the two strands we can see that geographical
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thinking is so much more than places on a map.