Form 1

Quiz Topics

1.1.1 Introduction to Geography

Specific Competence: Show that you understand Geography. Learning Activities: Talk about the main ideas in Geography. Identify the two types of Geography: Physical (about natural features) and Human (about people and their activities). Understand why studying Geography is important (like protecting nature, finding your way, or understanding spaces). Expected Standard: You clearly show that you understand Geography.

1.2.1 Earth in the Solar System & Its Basic Characteristics

Specific Competence: Show that you understand Earth’s place in the solar system and its shape and size. Learning Activities: Name the parts of the solar system (Sun, planets, shooting stars). Watch things happening in space (like moon changes, sun/moon blocks, shooting stars, visible planets). Describe Earth’s shape and size. Look at proof of Earth’s shape. Connect Earth’s shape and size to natural events (like weather, ocean currents) and human activities (like talking through satellites). Expected Standard: You correctly show that you understand Earth’s place, shape, and size.

1.2.2 Earth's Movements and Graticule

Specific Competence: Use what you know about Earth’s movements and the imaginary lines on Earth (graticule) in different situations. Learning Activities: Study Earth’s spin (which causes day/night, time differences, and changes wind direction). Study Earth’s journey around the sun (which causes seasons, different day lengths, sun/moon blocks, and how high the midday sun is). Use this knowledge when planning events, making calendars, or predicting weather. Describe the imaginary lines called latitude (horizontal) and longitude (vertical); find places using computer mapping tools (GIS, GPS) and maps. Calculate differences in time and longitude. Figure out distances using latitude. Calculate the angle of the midday sun and use it for placing solar panels, designing buildings, or finding directions. Expected Standard: You correctly use your knowledge of Earth’s movements and graticule for all calculations and uses.

1.2.3 The Earth’s Atmosphere

Specific Competence: Help protect the air around Earth. Learning Activities: Name the layers of air around Earth (Troposphere, Stratosphere, Mesosphere, Ionosphere, Thermosphere, Exosphere). Explain what the atmosphere does (gives us air, protects from harmful sun rays, helps with the water cycle, keeps Earth warm). Take part in actions to protect the atmosphere (planting trees, recycling, using environmentally friendly transport). Expected Standard: You help protect the atmosphere properly.

1.3.1 Weather and Climate

Specific Competence: Use what you know about weather and climate in your daily life. Learning Activities: Tell the difference between weather (what happens day-to-day) and climate (average weather over a long time). Name the parts of weather (how hot or cold it is, how much moisture is in the air, how much rain, how many clouds). Name things that affect weather and climate (how far north or south you are, how high up you are, winds, seasons). Look at Zambia’s climate (savanna type, winds, seasons). Use this knowledge in farming, health, and planning outdoor activities. Expected Standard: You correctly use your knowledge of weather and climate.

1.3.2 Climate Change

Specific Competence: Understand and explain climate change. Learning Activities: Identify human activities that cause climate change (burning fuels like coal and oil, farming, cutting down forests). Identify natural things that cause climate change (like volcanoes erupting). Expected Standard: You explain climate change correctly.

1.3.3 Mitigation and Adaptation to Climate Change

Specific Competence: Take action to reduce climate change and adjust to its effects. Learning Activities: Practice ways to reduce climate change (using energy from sun/wind, planting trees, saving water, making less waste). Change your way of life to deal with climate risks (growing crops that can survive dry weather, collecting rainwater, getting ready for disasters). Expected Standard: You correctly practice ways to reduce and adjust to climate change.

1.4.1 Natural Resources

Specific Competence: Use natural resources that can be replaced (renewable) and those that cannot (non-renewable) in a responsible way. Learning Activities: Name natural resources. Put them into groups: renewable (like water, land, wildlife, sun energy) and non-renewable (like minerals, coal, oil). Expected Standard: You use resources responsibly.

1.5.1 Population Composition

Specific Competence: Show that you understand what makes up a population. Learning Activities: Learn about concepts like census (counting people), population density (how many people in an area), birth rate (how many babies born), death rate (how many people die), and migration (people moving). Draw and understand population pyramids (charts showing age and gender). Expected Standard: You correctly show your understanding.

1.5.2 Population Distribution in Zambia

Specific Competence: Understand how people are spread out in Zambia. Learning Activities: Find areas where few people live, a moderate number live, and many people live. Describe what makes people choose to live in certain areas (like water, electricity, minerals, transport). Understand population spread using maps and computer mapping tools (GIS). Expected Standard: You correctly understand how people are spread out.

1.5.3 Rapid Population Growth in Zambia

Specific Competence: Deal with the problems caused by fast population growth. Learning Activities: Understand why the population is growing fast (many babies being born, early marriages, fewer people dying). Identify the bad effects (people without jobs, too many people in one place, crime, too much pressure on services). Explore the good things (more workers, using natural resources, safety). Suggest ways to solve problems (managing waste and resources, making people aware). Expected Standard: You deal with the problems correctly.

1.5.4 Migration

Specific Competence: Use what you know about people moving from one place to another in your daily life. Learning Activities: Talk about different types of movement (within a country, between countries, moving for certain seasons). Understand why people move (for jobs, services, because of disasters, or feeling unsafe). Look at the good and bad effects of people moving on both the place they leave and the place they go to. Connect migration to the workforce, changes in culture, and effects on the environment. Expected Standard: You correctly use your knowledge.

1.6.1 Settlements

Specific Competence: Help make places where people live (settlements) tidy and organized. Learning Activities: Identify different types of settlements (villages, towns). Arrange them from smallest to largest (from a single home to a big city). Identify and draw common patterns of settlements (like along a line, grouped together, or spread out). Expected Standard: You help make settlements tidy and organized correctly.

1.6.2 Location of Settlements

Specific Competence: Make good choices about where to build settlements. Learning Activities: Identify things that influence where settlements are built (shape of the land, soil quality, water, transport). Describe what settlements are used for (like for government, shops, mining, farming). Choose settlement locations by thinking about facilities, safety, and transport. Expected Standard: You make settlement choices correctly.

1.6.3 Settlement Challenges and Urbanisation

Specific Competence: Solve problems in settlements and understand how cities growing bigger affects daily life and the environment. Learning Activities: Identify problems (in villages: poor services, bad roads; in cities: too many people, waste, people without jobs). Suggest solutions (better sanitation, protecting nature, planting trees, promoting walking/cycling, preparing for disasters). Talk about why cities are growing fast (social, physical, economic reasons). Understand the effects (on farmers, city planners, businesses). Connect city growth to daily life (like solutions for traffic, different cultures living together, clean-up activities, tree planting). Expected Standard: You solve challenges and connect city growth to daily life and the environment correctly.