This document discusses the GeoCapabilities 3 project, which aims to promote powerful geographical knowledge and social justice in geography education. It provides an overview of the GeoCapabilities 3 toolkit, which guides teachers through engaging with academic geography, lesson planning using tools to evaluate students' knowledge, teaching lessons, and reflecting on student learning outcomes. The document also outlines some potential future directions for the GeoCapabilities project, such as expanding its focus beyond just geography to other disciplines, emphasizing values in addition to knowledge, exploring applications in primary education, and using climate change as a topic focus. It raises questions about supporting teachers and students, promoting social justice lessons, facilitating access to disciplinary knowledge, and consolidating Geocapabilities approaches across different resources and platforms.
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Powerful Geographical Knowledge in Practice
1. This project has been funded with support from the European Commission. This Web site reflects the views only of the authors,
and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein.
http://www.geocapabilities.org
GeoCapabilities 3
Panel Discussion – What makes
learning geography ‘powerful’?
Powerful geographical knowledge in practice and with attention to social
justice – some implications of the Geocapabilities 3 project
Mitchell, D., Beneker, T., Biddulph, M. ,
Hanus, M., Leininger, C. , Zwartjes, L.,
and Donert, K.
2. What makes learning geography ‘powerful’?
A perspective from the GeoCapabilities 3 project:
1. Reaching areas and schools areas labelled as ‘deprived’
and ‘failing’.
2. Maintaining the teacher’s iterative relationship between
classroom teaching and engagement with the discipline
3. Practical tools to evaluate how teachers and children
have accessed powerful disciplinary knowledge (PDK)
3. 1.
Vignette
Current Geography (powerful
disciplinary knowledge – PDK)
2. Planning
3. Teach lessons
4. Evaluation
Social Justice
The GeoCapabilities 3 Toolkit in steps
Step 1 – Thinking
Geographically Engage with
academic Geography…write
a vignette to clarify your
thinking.
Step 2 – Lesson
planning – use the PDK
planning tool, leading
to assessing students’
current knowledge and
to consider which
powerful pedagogies
to adopt. Find a rich
resource or curriculum
artefact on which to
build a lesson/s
Step 4 – Evaluation &
reflection Assess &
evaluate how
geographical
concepts, contexts
and procedural
knowledge and skills
have developed from
the lessons. Return
back to your vignette,
to reflect on how far
and why your original
ideas changed.
Step 3 – Teach the lessons
Throughout the process hold the concept of social justice in mind
5. This project has been funded with support from the European Commission. This Web site reflects the views only of the authors,
and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein.
http://www.geocapabilities.org
GeoCapabilities 3
What next for the
GeoCapabilities Project?
Some suggested directions:
1. Knowledge capabilities (interdisciplinary – not just Geo…?)
2. Values dimension for capabilities (PDK downplays values?)
3. Primary education?
4. Climate change education as focus?
Current bids for research:
EPoCH (Engagement with Knowledge Power in Schools and the Development of Capabilities
for the Human Epoch) Marie Curie
Curriculum Making for the Anthropocene Spencer foundation
KCaVES (knowledge capabilities and values for environmental sustainability) Esmee Fairbairn
6. Questions & Discussion – What makes learning geography ‘powerful’?
1. What next for the GoCapabilities project?
2. The Geocapability approach aims to improve student learning but the theory is
focused on teacher's practices. How can theory evolve to improve the
consideration of student learning?
3. How best can we add value to teachers who are using a GeoCapabilities
approach?.....What needs do we (as a geography education community) need to
meet?
4. What social justice lessons does GeoCapabilities 3 provide? What needs to be
done to share these more widely? What follow up is needed?
5. What can be done by the geography community to help teachers get better
access to the latest updated Powerful Geography Disciplinary Knowledge?
Which are the channels? Who should be responsible?
6. How could the GeoCapabilities toolkit and supporting materials be used? Is
there any advice we can supply?
7. In recent years, Geocapabilities have become an important approach in
geographical education in many countries around the world. However, this
knowledge is fragmented into different platforms (web pages, journals etc).
Would it be possible / appropriate to invite authors to share their experiences
and then concentrate them in one place / portal?
8. What perspectives are needed in geography curriculum design and
development?