Changing weather and climate
This overview outlines a series of key questions with associated activity options that can contribute to the teaching of the national curriculum subject content for GCSE Geography (Changing weather and climate), alongside individual exam board specifications. Drawing on the latest scientific data and projections, these resources can support learners to develop an understanding of the relationship between humans, climate change and the natural world.
Key Questions
What is climate change?
Support learners to retrieve knowledge about key terms: climate change, global warming and the greenhouse effect. Consider the importance of learners raising their own questions about climate change in preparation for their future learning.
Carbon Footprint | Royal Meteorological Society
Climate Change Tiles | Royal Geographical Society
Small Gases, Big Effect | Royal Geographical Society
How do we know that the Earth’s climate is changing?
Through these activities learners can understand the most reliable and comprehensive source of information about climate change: the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), as well as the evidence the IPCC report draws upon. Use resources to support learners to explore different sources of evidence that tell us how climate is changing as a consequence of human activity. For example by plotting greenhouse gas concentration data against global temperature data.
The Evidence for Past Climate Change | Royal Meteorological Society
The Evidence for Climate Change | Royal Meteorological Society
Climate Stripes | Royal Meteorological Society
Past Climate | Royal Meteorological Society
Can we predict the future?
Explore how the IPCC provides us with the science of the impacts of climate change as well as evidence-based ideas about how to tackle the challenges of its potential effects.
Modelling Future Climate in the UK | esri UK
Climate Change and urban areas | Royal Meteorological Society
What are the impacts of climate change on people and places around the world?
This can be an opportunity to explore broad global impacts like ocean acidification and the science behind them. As well as regionally or locally specific impacts such as deforestation or changes to the frequency of extreme weather, and the differing effects on people in different places.
Ocean Acidification | Royal Meteorological Society
Rainforest Deforestation | Royal Meteorological Society
The 2022 Pakistan floods | Royal Geographical Society
Regions most affected by climate change | Royal Meteorological Society
What are people doing in response to the impacts of climate change?
These resources support learners to understand the terms climate change mitigation and adaptation. Learners can use resources to analyse different mitigating strategies including nature-based solutions.
Climate change and ecosystem recovery | Royal Geographical Society
My2050 | Royal Geographical Society
How do we stay safe as sea levels rise? | The Royal Society
How can we work towards a positive vision of the future?
These resources provide interdisciplinary opportunities for learners to explore their own and others’ feelings about climate change. Resources also include opportunities to celebrate the ways in which other people and places are positively responding to the impacts of climate change, to provide examples of positive changes learners might make themselves.
We've Got The Poetry Power | The Poetry Society
Supporting Information
Key Concepts
Climate change – a large-scale, long-term shift in the planet's weather patterns and average temperatures
Global Warming – the long-term heating of Earth’s surface observed since the pre-industrial period due to human activities
Anthropocene – An unofficial term for the current geological age; the period during which human activity started to have a notable impact on the climate and environment.
Adaptation – Actions taken to help cope with the effects of climate change, for example, building flood defences, or planting new crops that will thrive under new conditions. Not to be confused with the biological definition, i.e. a characteristic of an organism that improves the likelihood of it surviving and/or reproducing.
Mitigation – Actions taken to limit the impacts of climate change, such as introducing targets to limit emissions.
Extreme weather – A weather event that is notably different from the usual weather pattern – ie particularly severe or unseasonable. For example, flash floods or a heat wave in the UK.
Further Activities and Opportunities
Students may wish to participate in the National Education Nature Park programme, exploring nature-based responses to the impacts of climate change.
Students can use the Investigate Weather and Microclimates tool to develop and extend geography fieldwork skills, applying enquiry and investigative approaches to real world contexts.
Green Careers
These career profiles from the Royal Meteorological Society showcase a range of roles available in relation to climate science.
Curriculum links
Evidence informed climate pedagogy highlights the importance of interdisciplinary learning where opportunities allow. Links to subjects areas, beyond Geography, have therefore been identified.
AQA 3.1.1.4: Climate change is the result of natural and human factors and has a range of effects; managing climate change involves mitigation (reducing causes) and adaptation (responding to change).
Edexcel – A 2.2 – 2.4 The global climate was different in the past and continues to change due to natural causes; Global climate is now changing because of human activity; The UK has a distinct climate which has changed over time.
Edexcel – B 1.2 / 1.3 Climate has changed in the past through natural causes on timescales ranging from hundreds to millions of years; Global climate is now changing because of human activity, and there is uncertainty about future climates.
Eduqas – A 5.1.1/ 5.1.2 What is the evidence for climate change? What are the causes of climate change?
Eduqas – B 2.4.1 – 2.4.5 How has climate changed during the Quaternary period? What are the causes of global warming? What are the consequences of climate change? How and why do attitudes to climate change vary? What role can individuals and government in the UK play in reducing the risk of climate change?
OCR – A 2.3.1 – 2.3.3 The climate has changed from the start of the Quaternary period; there are several possible changes of climate change; climate change has consequences.
OCR B 2.1 What evidence is there for climate change? Is climate change a natural process? Why is climate change a global issue?
Earth and atmospheric science
- Evidence, and uncertainties in evidence, for additional anthropogenic causes of climate change
- Potential effects of, and mitigation of, increased levels of carbon dioxide and methane on the Earth’s climate
- Understanding other systems and forms of government, both democratic and non-democratic, beyond the United Kingdom
- The different ways in which a citizen can contribute to the improvement of his or her community
- To include the opportunity to participate actively in community volunteering, as well as other forms of responsible activity.