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Future Migration Trends

Geography • 40 • 30 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Geography
40
30 students
23 April 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 9 of 10 in the unit "Migration Patterns Explored". Lesson Title: Future Trends in Migration Lesson Description: Predict future migration trends based on current data and research. Students will create a presentation on potential future scenarios for migration.

Future Migration Trends

Overview

Duration: 40 minutes
Class size: 30 students
Unit: Migration Patterns Explored (Lesson 9 of 10)
Age group: First-year secondary students (typically 12-13 years old)
Curriculum reference: Junior Cycle Geography (Irish National Curriculum)
Strand: People and Places – Understanding Migration, Population Change, and Global Interactions
Learning outcomes:

  • Predict emerging migration trends using current data and research.
  • Develop skills in synthesising information and communicating ideas effectively.
  • Appreciate the complexity and impact of migration on global societies.

Learning Intentions

By the end of this lesson, students will:

  • Analyse recent migration data and trends.
  • Predict possible future migration patterns.
  • Work collaboratively to produce a concise presentation on future migration scenarios.
  • Use evidence-based reasoning to justify their predictions.

Success Criteria

Students can:

  • Identify key factors influencing migration in the future (climate change, economics, conflict).
  • Create a 3-4 minute presentation that outlines a plausible future migration trend supported by data.
  • Express their ideas clearly and engage their peers during presentations.

Resources

  • Copies of simplified recent migration data charts/infographics (prepared by teacher)
  • A short example video/podcast excerpt (2 minutes) summarising migration trends worldwide (transcript provided for accessibility).
  • Presentation template handouts (outline format for 3-4 min talk)
  • Whiteboard and markers or interactive board
  • Timer or stopwatch
  • Paper and pens for note-taking

Lesson Structure

1. Starter (5 minutes)

Activity: Quick Think-Pair-Share

  • Prompt question displayed: “What factors today might change where people move in the future?”
  • Students think silently for 1 minute, then discuss in pairs for 2 minutes.
  • Class shares 2-3 ideas aloud; teacher lists keywords on the board.
    Purpose: Activate prior knowledge, focus attention on the lesson topic.

2. Input and Modelling (10 minutes)

Activity: Teacher-led exploration of current migration data & trends

  • Teacher presents 3 current migration trends using visuals (e.g., climate-related migration increases, economic migration flows, displacement from conflict zones).
  • Highlight key data points and emerging factors that might influence future migration.
  • Play short video/podcast excerpt illustrating how researchers predict migration will evolve.
  • Teacher models how to predict future trends from existing data, using "If climate zones become hotter, then migration from those areas may increase" as an example logic chain.
    Purpose: Build students’ ability to interpret data and make logical predictions.

3. Group Work (15 minutes)

Activity: Collaborative future migration presentation creation

  • Students split into 6 groups (5 per group). Each group receives:
    • A different scenario to focus on (e.g., climate change, technological growth, wars/conflicts, economic changes, government policies, pandemics).
    • A sheet of key data and prompt questions relevant to their scenario.
    • Presentation template with fields: Scenario description, Predicted migration trend, Reasons/Data supporting prediction, Potential effects on people/places.
  • Groups discuss and plan their presentations (3-4 minutes).
  • Teacher circulates, scaffolding thinking and clarifying factual points.

4. Presentation and Peer Feedback (8 minutes)

Activity: Student presentations

  • Each group delivers a 3-4 minute presentation to the class.
  • Peers complete quick “two stars and a wish” feedback on a worksheet:
    • Two positive points about the prediction or presentation.
    • One suggestion to improve the argument or clarity.
  • Teacher uses a timer to keep to schedule.

5. Plenary and Reflection (2 minutes)

Activity: Whole-class reflection question

  • Shout out: “What surprised you most about the future migration predictions today?”
  • Students share briefly.
  • Teacher links reflections back to importance of understanding migration for global citizenship and future planning.

Assessment and Differentiation

  • Formative assessment through group presentations and peer feedback.
  • Differentiated prompt sheets with scaffolded questions for lower-ability groups.
  • Challenge extension: students with higher ability can consider compound factors (e.g., how climate and conflict may combine to increase migration).
  • Visual aids and transcripts support EAL and SEN students.

Cross-Curricular Links and 21st Century Skills

  • English: Developing presentation and communication skills.
  • CSPE: Considering human rights and responsibilities in migration.
  • Critical Thinking: Analysing data to form evidence-based predictions.
  • Collaboration and ICT: Working in groups, potentially using digital tools for presentations in follow-up lessons.

Teacher’s Notes

  • Encourage creativity in presentations (e.g., role-playing future migrants, storytelling techniques).
  • Use open-ended questions during group work to promote deeper thinking.
  • Promote positive questioning during peer feedback to build confidence and growth mindset.
  • Manage timing closely to maintain pace and engagement.

This lesson prepares students well for the final lesson, which will focus on reflecting on migration patterns and proposing solutions or policies to address migration challenges, embedding relevant Junior Cycle indicators and fostering global awareness.

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