Facing the Flood
📘 Curriculum Reference
Key Stage: KS3
Subject: Geography
Year Group: Year 7
Curriculum Area: Human and Physical Geography
National Curriculum Link:
“Understand the key processes in physical geography relating to: weather and climate, including the change in weather patterns and extreme weather events.”
“Understand the interaction between physical and human processes, and how these affect landscapes and environments.”
Topic Focus: Impacts of Flooding (Human and Physical)
⏱ Duration
Total Time: 20-25 minutes
Class Size: 30 students
🎯 Learning Objectives
By the end of this short lesson, students will be able to:
- Identify and explain at least 3 key human and 3 physical impacts of flooding.
- Understand how floods affect different communities in the UK.
- Apply their understanding in a collaborative, creative mini-task.
- Use geographical vocabulary to describe flood events confidently.
📦 Resources Required
- PowerPoint slides (visual cues only)
- Whiteboard and pens
- Printed “Flood Impact Cards”
- Laminated A3 UK map
- Micro-role play character cards
- Dice (1 per table group)
- Timer or visual clock
- Post-it notes (2 per pupil)
🧠 Prior Knowledge
This lesson assumes students have previously studied:
- What flooding is and how it occurs (precipitation, river overflow, surface runoff).
- A basic understanding of UK rivers and recent extreme weather (e.g. Storm Desmond 2015, Storm Ciara 2020).
🎬 Lesson Breakdown
⌛ 0:00 – 2:00 | Starter – “What if your town flooded?”
Activity:
Students close their eyes for 20 seconds and imagine waking up to find their street underwater.
Then they have 30 seconds to write on their post-it:
🌊 “What would change in your day?”
Interaction:
Ask 4–5 students to share their answers. Stick post-its around a laminated photo of a flooded UK street for visual impact.
Key Purpose: Emotional engagement and personal connection to the topic.
🔍 2:00 – 7:00 | Concept Check – Types of Impacts
Mini-Teaching (3 mins): Use 3 photos with minimal text to guide a short Q&A:
- Flooded farmland (Ask: What's lost here?)
- Submerged houses (Ask: How long might this take to recover from?)
- Emergency responders (Ask: Who might be stretched because of this?)
Build the Board (2 mins): On the board, co-create a T-chart:
| Physical Impacts | Human Impacts |
|----------------------|----------------------|
| Erosion of river banks | Loss of homes |
| Contaminated water | Disrupted transport |
| Landslides | Health risks |
Pupils copy this quick chart into their books or onto paper.
🎯 7:00 – 15:00 | Main Task – Flood Roulette 🌧🎲
Objective: Understand variable impacts by 'living through' a flood incident.
Set-up:
- Arrange pupils in table groups of 5.
- Each table receives:
- 1 UK map (A3, laminated)
- 1 dice
- 1 set of “Flood Character Cards” (e.g. Farmer in Somerset, 12-year-old in York, firefighter in Doncaster, council worker in Cumbria)
- 1 “Flood Impact Deck” (cards with consequences like “Evacuated for 6 days”, “Phone lines down”, “Waterlogged livestock”, “School closed”)
Instructions (5 mins task):
- Each student picks a character.
- One roll per group = flood location (number matched to UK region).
- Students draw 2 random impact cards and apply them through their character's lens.
(e.g. “As a farmer in Somerset, losing power affects my livestock and I can’t keep the pumps going...”)
Optional extension twist:
Introduce Challenge Cards (e.g. “Your insurance is rejected. What now?”)
💬 15:00 – 19:00 | Class Reflection – Voices from the Flood
Instructions:
Invite volunteers from 3–4 groups to give a 30-second “News Interview” in-character about their experience.
Example prompt for volunteers:
🎤 “Tell us what happened when the flood hit your area and how your life changed.”
Peer Feedback Prompt:
“Thumbs up if you heard a clear human or physical impact.”
🎓 19:00 – 20:00 | Wrap-up & Exit Ticket
Ask:
“In just a word or phrase, how would you describe the impact of flooding... now?”
Students write their answer on a fresh post-it and stick it to a “Flood Wave” visual on the exit door.
Examples might be:
- Disruptive
- Life-changing
- Scary
- Expensive
- Unexpected
📏 Assessment for Learning (AfL)
- Formative: Observation of student contributions during discussion and group task.
- Mini-plenary check: Interview responses demonstrate depth of understanding.
- Post-it exit ticket: Provides insight into overall takeaway sentiment and understanding.
🧠 Extension Ideas (For Interview Discussion)
- Follow-up homework task: Investigate a recent UK flood event and write a short piece on "What might have prevented this?"
- Next lesson: Managing flood risk – hard vs soft engineering (Tyne or Somerset river basins)
- SEN scaffolding: Provide sentence starters for news interviews and pre-teach key vocab (e.g. “evacuation”, “rescue services”, “transport links”)
🎉 Why This Lesson Wows
- Inclusive & Differentiated: Everyone has a role in the mini-drama with low stakes but high engagement.
- Interactive Geography: Students simulate real impacts, promoting empathy and memorable learning.
- Curriculum-rooted Creativity: All impacts are locally relevant and map directly to National Curriculum outcomes.
- Assessment Built-In: Learners show, not just tell, what they've understood.
Let the rivers rise in their imaginations — but keep their learning grounded in real-world UK geography.