In the run
up to the World Water Day, which falls on 22 March, I would like to share my
thoughts on how might we teach the secondary 1 topic on “Water” in our
geography curriculum. This blog post is the result of field discussions with
colleagues of geography over zoom and in person as we delightfully explored the
Sungei Serangoon catchment in recent days.
In the
lower secondary geography curriculum, the topic of water takes center stage.
Water is a strategic and valuable resource in Singapore. Teaching this topic
well helps our students gain useful understanding and insight that will go a
long way in developing an appreciation of our constraints, innovations and
strategies that ensure sustainability.
An organising frame for this topic is to use the hydrological cycle as a starting point. Students are introduced the key processes, water flows and stores. From here, the teacher adopts a “zoom out” perspective to locate various rivers, lakes and oceans in the world. This approach to learning about water skips the critical concept of a “water shed” or a “catchment”, hindering a holistic understanding of other related concepts and processes like resource use (of water), sources of pollution and conservation strategies. As a result, some students learn these sub-topics through rote memorisation of facts unconnected bodies of fact. This gives rise to at best patchy comprehension, and at worst, frustrated and disengaged learning.
I would like to suggest three simple ways to re-make this topic for more engaged teaching and learning.
(A)
Using big ideas and place-based learning
By
leveraging the concept of “water resource management within a catchment”, teachers
can easily “connect the dots” for students. Almost all secondary schools are
located within a water catchment (See Figure 1 below).
Fig 1: Major Waterways in Singapore and their catchments (can you find which catchment does your school belong to?)
Teachers
can tap on PUB’s Active, Beautiful, Clean Waters (ABC Waters) Programme that
was launched in 2006, to understand how quality water bodies enhance
liveability (ABC Waters Home
(pub.gov.sg).
To further augment this big idea, place-based learning offers an invaluable lens for students to dive into enquiry of an urban environment. The catchment provides a reasonable scale of exploration for secondary school students, both in its breadth and depth. In the terms of breadth, students could explore spatial issues beyond just the precinct or neighbourhood (e.g. a few blocks of flats) or a specific locale (e.g. Jurong Lake). In terms of depth, a catchment provides a thematic approach to understanding a place better (e.g., Singapore River catchment, which naturally includes its history and changes in landuse over time).
In what follows, I will use the Sungei Serangoon catchment as an example
to illustrate what I mean (Figure 2).
Fig 2: Unit concept map on Water - Sungei
Serangoon catchment
(B) Differentiating
for diverse learners
High
ability students may be challenged to use a similar lens to study another water
catchment with very different characteristics from the Sungei Serangoon
catchment, e.g. Kallang-Marina Basin, which is incidentally our largest
catchment and most urbanised one. This would present students with plenty of
opportunities to uncover insight into the design, building and maintenance of
this unique reservoir. When used as a contrasting example, students are able to discern distinguishing characteristics of both catchment, which is a good exercise in developing critical thinking skills.
For students that require more support in learning, teachers may consider focusing on geographical skills that are a “must learn” for this group of learners, reserving the “good-to-learn” as optional extensions for students who have already demonstrated mastery of core skills. Teachers may also consider giving a light touch of the history of Sungei Serangoon, instead give more time and space for students to learn the content concepts of the current time scale where the spotlight is shone on water as a strategic resource. As content concepts are somewhat recurring between the past and present time frame, doing it this way gives additional time and space for these students to learn.
(C)
Use of technology in learning
Armed with
personal learning devices, students have ready access to digital apps that efficiently
capture and collate data. Below is a non-exhaustive list teachers can consider leveraging.
Suggested app or website |
Purpose |
Can be used in |
Otter.ai |
Speech to text
conversation |
Interviews, oral
histories |
Chat GPT 3.5 |
Summaries of
interviews |
Interviews, oral
histories |
Google Forms |
Survey questionnaire |
Surveys, summation
and presentation of data |
Skitch |
Annotations on
photographs |
Photograph
interpretation |
Historical maps of
Singapore |
Landuse changes |
Comparing old and
new land uses |
A quick
curriculum re-make of this topic presents a multitude of engagement opportunities
for our lower secondary learners to connect more authentically with three prescribed guiding questions of the topic. It offers easy entry points for the teacher to
conduct inquiry, more occasions for bite-sized fieldwork, greater flexibility for differentiation
and scaffolding, and naturally segues into the use of ed- tech tools and apps.
The teacher can also progress to teaching the fourth guiding question on water management strategies in a contextualised manner. Now that we have understood the first step to water sustainability comes from ensuring a regular, clean and good quality supply from our reservoirs, how might we manage demand so that we ensure this supply does not run out?
More importantly, students' appreciation of processes within a catchment
helps them to scale up their understanding to a regional water
catchment (such as the Amazon River) which ties in with the next topic
on tropical rainforest. Eventually, understanding this helps them see how the global water cycle is a critical natural process that is supporting plant, animal and human life on Earth. This underscores the connected nature of our natural systems which undergirds the
true essence of a geography curriculum.
No comments:
Post a Comment