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Geography

GCSE/IGCSE Geography

GCSE/IGCSE Geography

AQA · OCR · Pearson Edexcel · WJEC · Cambridge IGCSE

Physical Geography

  • Natural Hazards
  • Tectonic Processes (Earthquakes, Volcanoes, Plate Movements)
  • Weather Hazards and Climate Change
  • Coastal Landscapes and Processes
  • River Landscapes and Processes
  • Glacial and Desert Environments
  • Ecosystems and Biomes
  • Tropical Rainforests
  • Hot Deserts
  • Cold Environments

Human Geography

  • Urbanisation and Changing Cities
  • Population and Migration
  • Economic Development
  • Globalisation and Interdependence
  • The Development Gap
  • Resource Management (Food, Water, Energy)
  • Sustainable Development
  • Industrial and Economic Change
  • Tourism and its Impacts

Environmental Geography

  • Climate Change Impacts and Responses
  • Sustainable Resource Use
  • Human Impact on the Environment
  • Waste, Pollution and Environmental Management
  • Conservation and Biodiversity
  • Sustainable Cities and Living

Geographical Skills

  • Map Skills (OS Maps, Scale, Grid References, Symbols)
  • Graphs, Charts, and Data Interpretation
  • Fieldwork Enquiry Skills
  • Analysing Geographical Information
  • Evaluating Evidence and Reaching Conclusions

Fieldwork & Applied Geography

  • Physical Geography Fieldwork (e.g. rivers or coasts)
  • Human Geography Fieldwork (e.g. urban or retail studies)
  • Designing and Conducting Enquiries
  • Data Collection, Presentation and Evaluation
A Level Geography

A Level Geography

AQA · OCR · Pearson Edexcel · WJEC · Cambridge International

Physical Geography

  • Water & Carbon Cycles (stores, fluxes, feedbacks; drainage basins; global carbon budget)
  • Coastal Systems & Landscapes (sediment cells, processes, landforms, management)
  • Glacial & Periglacial Systems (processes, landforms, past & present ice, permafrost)
  • Hazards (tectonic, seismic, volcanic, storm hazards; risk, vulnerability, management)
  • Ecosystems & Biodiversity (succession, nutrient cycles, biome case studies)
  • Weather, Climate & Atmospheric Systems (circulation, extreme weather, climate change)
  • Resource Security: Water/Energy (availability, inequality, futures, governance)

Human Geography

  • Global Systems & Governance (trade, aid, TNCs, global commons, institutions)
  • Changing Places (sense of place, place-making, representation, lived experience)
  • Urban Environments (growth, sustainability, inequality, regeneration, smart cities)
  • Population & the Environment (health, food production, carrying capacity, risk)
  • Resource Security (food, water, energy, mineral security; geopolitics; futures)
  • Globalisation & Development (uneven development, flows, emerging economies)
  • Migration & Identity (flows, policies, transnationalism, cultural change)

Geographical Skills

  • Core cartographic skills (OS maps, scale, projections, cross-sections, choropleths)
  • Quantitative skills (sampling, measures of central tendency & dispersion, hypothesis testing)
  • Statistical tests (Spearman’s rho, Chi-squared, Mann–Whitney, t-test as appropriate)
  • Geospatial skills (GIS mapping, spatial analysis, remote sensing interpretation)
  • Qualitative skills (content analysis, coding, field sketches, photo & text interpretation)
  • Data presentation (graphs, infographics, geovisualisation) & evaluation

Fieldwork & NEA (Independent Investigation)

  • Title design & focused questions (hypotheses, conceptual frameworks)
  • Methodology & sampling (primary/secondary data, ethics, risk assessment)
  • Field techniques (physical: river/coast/soil/vegetation; human: surveys, interviews, counts)
  • Data processing & analysis (statistics, GIS, triangulation, uncertainty)
  • Discussion, conclusions & evaluation (limitations, reliability, future research)
  • Report structure, academic writing & referencing

Synoptic & Contemporary Themes

  • Interdependence of human & physical systems; feedbacks & thresholds
  • Players, attitudes & actions; governance at multiple scales
  • Futures & uncertainties; scenario planning & decision making
  • Place, space, scale & temporal change as organising concepts
  • Applied case studies integrating multiple topics (e.g., coastal megacities, Arctic, Sahel)
IB Geography (SL & HL)

IB Geography (SL & HL)

IB Diploma Programme — Overview for Standard Level & Higher Level

Core Themes (SL & HL)

  • Changing Population — population distribution, demographics, megacity growth, ageing/ youthful structures, migration patterns & drivers, policies.
  • Global Climate — Vulnerability & Resilience — climate change processes, spatial patterns, risk & exposure, mitigation vs adaptation, governance.
  • Global Resource Consumption & Security — water–food–energy nexus, ecological footprint, circular economy, inequality, futures & scenarios.

Optional Themes (choose per course)

  • Freshwater — drainage basins, hydrological change, flooding/drought, demand & conflict, management strategies.
  • Oceans & Coastal Margins — processes & landforms, littoral cells, marine ecosystems, coastal risk, management & resilience.
  • Extreme Environments — arid/cold characteristics, processes, opportunities & challenges, human use & sustainability.
  • Geophysical Hazards — tectonic processes, multi-hazard environments, risk, prediction, governance & recovery.
  • Leisure, Tourism & Sport — spatial patterns, mega-events, impacts, carrying capacity, destination life cycles, regeneration.
  • Food & Health — food systems, nutrition transition, health patterns, epidemics/pandemics, policy & equity.
  • Urban Environments — urban growth & form, inequality, sustainability, transport, liveability, smart cities.

HL Extension — Global Interactions (HL only)

  • Measuring global interactions; globalisation indices; networks, flows & hubs.
  • Power of TNCs, global production networks, trade & investment, labour flows.
  • Cultural diffusion, hybridity, identities & resistance; language/media/tech.
  • Human development, inequality & ethics; sovereignty, governance & the commons.
  • Environmental impacts of globalisation; risk, resilience & sustainable futures.

Geographical Skills (assessed across papers)

  • Cartographic: map reading & interpretation, scale, profiles, spatial patterns.
  • Quantitative: sampling, descriptive stats, correlations, hypothesis testing.
  • Geospatial: GIS mapping, overlays, remote sensing, spatial analysis.
  • Qualitative: questionnaires, interviews, content analysis, field sketches & photos.
  • Data presentation: graphs, charts, infographics, geovisualisation; evaluation.

IA Fieldwork (Internal Assessment)

  • Fieldwork question linked to syllabus; geographic context & justification.
  • Methods & sampling; ethics, risk assessment; primary/secondary data.
  • Treatment of information: data processing, statistics, mapping, GIS.
  • Analysis, discussion & conclusion; uncertainties, limitations & evaluation.
  • Communication: structure, referencing, cartographic & graphical quality.
Our Geography Tutors | MyLearningLab

Our Geography Tutors

Expert online Geography tuition for GCSE/IGCSE, A Level, IB (SL & HL) and international curricula.

At MyLearningLab, our Geography tutors bring learning to life — connecting classroom concepts to the real world. Each tutor is a qualified teacher and examination specialist who combines academic excellence with a passion for helping students think critically about the relationships between people, places, and environments. From coasts to climate systems, we help learners see Geography as a living, global subject with relevance far beyond the exam hall.

Our Approach

We blend deep subject knowledge with empathy, clarity, and care. Lessons are sequenced to reinforce key ideas and build confidence, using visual explanations, maps, and real-world case studies. Tutors adapt their teaching to each learner’s pace and goals, ensuring strong foundations and sustained progress.

  • Diagnostic start — identify current strengths and learning gaps.
  • Structured lessons — introduce, model, practise, and review key content.
  • Exam focus — command words, mark schemes, and model answers.
  • Feedback-driven — personalised improvement targets after each session.

GCSE / IGCSE

At this level, our tutors build secure understanding of fundamental processes — from tectonics and weather systems to globalisation and resource management. We teach structured exam responses and case study application, helping students move confidently between physical and human geography topics.

  • Clear topic sequencing and spaced retrieval for recall.
  • Practical map skills: scale, grid references, and data interpretation.
  • Support for fieldwork and enquiry-based investigations.

A Level

At A Level, the emphasis shifts towards depth, analysis, and evaluation. Our tutors guide students through complex interactions within physical and human systems — from water and carbon cycles to global governance. Lessons are designed to develop argument, critical thinking, and independence.

  • Modelled essays and evaluation practice to meet higher-band criteria.
  • Integrated synoptic links across systems, scales, and case studies.
  • Specialist guidance for NEA investigations and fieldwork analysis.

IB (SL & HL)

Our IB tutors bring international experience and familiarity with the Diploma Programme framework. They support both Standard and Higher Level students through the Core, Options, and the HL Extension. Special attention is given to the Internal Assessment, ensuring students design, analyse, and write with academic rigour.

  • Structured IA coaching — from question design to data treatment.
  • Emphasis on conceptual understanding and global interconnections.
  • Exam technique for Papers 1, 2, and 3 with time management strategies.

International Experience

Many of our tutors have taught in schools across Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. This international perspective allows lessons to include comparative examples, case studies, and topical insights drawn from real contexts. We ensure every student feels their geography learning is globally relevant.

  • Integration of current events and global development trends.
  • Cross-cultural awareness and real-world context building.
  • Flexible support for international or bilingual curricula.

Assessment & Outcomes

Every Geography learner at MyLearningLab benefits from clear structure, constructive feedback, and progressive challenge. Through retrieval practice, exam-style tasks, and personal reflection, students learn how to think geographically and communicate effectively under pressure. The outcome is more than a grade — it’s a confident, informed, and curious geographer ready to make sense of a complex world.

To get started, share your curriculum and goals — we’ll match you with a Geography tutor who aligns with your needs and aspirations.
MyLearningLab — empowering Geography learners worldwide through expert, personalised teaching.

Book Now

Geography Testimonials | MyLearningLab

Geography Student Testimonials

A mix of IGCSE, GCSE, IB and A Level students — same clean slider look as Business & Economics.

IGCSE Geography

I used to revise by memorising random case study facts. My tutor showed me how to structure 6–9 mark answers using “because/ therefore/ however” and link back to the question. We built a small bank of located examples, and I practised using OS maps and graphs properly. I went from writing paragraphs with no data to clear arguments with evidence. In the mocks I moved from a 5 to a strong 8, and it actually feels achievable now.

Amara K.

Year 11 · Cambridge IGCSE

GCSE Geography

The biggest shift was understanding command words. My tutor drilled “explain vs evaluate” and made me practise short, timed responses with feedback after each. We also created one-page case study sheets with stats I could recall under pressure. Fieldwork write-up used to scare me, but the step-by-step approach (question → methods → limits) made it make sense. I finished feeling confident and actually enjoyed the exam.

Jake R.

Year 11 · AQA

IB Geography (SL)

My tutor helped me shape a focused IA question and choose realistic methods. We went through sampling, simple stats and clear mapping so my analysis didn’t feel like guesswork. The biggest help was learning how to evaluate uncertainties without sounding negative. For Paper 2, we built a quick-fire plan for case material so I could select examples fast. My teacher commented that my writing became more precise and balanced.

Lina S.

IB DP (SL) · Paper 2 & IA

A Level Geography

I struggled to link water, carbon and climate in essays. My tutor modelled how to build an argument with players, processes and evidence on each page. We practised introductions that set a line of reasoning and conclusions that actually judge. For the NEA, I learned how to justify methods, use GIS layers, and discuss reliability. My essays moved from descriptive to analytical, and my grades moved from C/B to A.

Rohan M.

Year 13 · Pearson Edexcel

IGCSE Geography

Lessons were super focused. We did 15-minute drills on graph interpretation and map skills, then short review quizzes so I knew exactly what to fix. I kept a small “case data” list with place names, figures and impacts. In the end I could explain processes and apply examples, not just memorise. My predicted 6 turned into an 8, and I felt calm going into both papers.

Zayne T.

Year 11 · Cambridge IGCSE

IB Geography (HL)

For the HL extension, I kept losing marks for vague globalisation answers. My tutor helped me frame responses around networks, flows and power, then choose TNC and governance examples that actually fit the question. We created paragraph stems for balance and evaluation. The IA guidance on sampling and uncertainty was gold. My teacher noticed the difference in clarity and depth within two weeks.

Elena V.

IB DP (HL) · Global Interactions

GCSE Geography

I found coasts confusing until my tutor broke it into systems: inputs, processes, stores and outputs. Suddenly the landforms and management strategies clicked. We also worked on timing, because I used to overwrite on 4 markers and rush the 9 marker. By the final mocks I could plan fast and write focused answers with located detail. It sounds small, but that structure changed everything.

Hannah P.

Year 10 → Year 11 · OCR B

A Level Geography

The NEA felt overwhelming. My tutor helped me frame a tight enquiry, design ethical methods and actually enjoy fieldwork. Using simple GIS overlays made patterns obvious and the analysis flowed. For hazards, we practised evaluative language and compared contrasting events so my arguments weren’t one-sided. My confidence with longer essays improved massively and my teacher said my evaluation finally “landed”.

Noah C.

Year 13 · AQA

IGCSE Geography

We used a simple template for 6 and 9 markers: point, evidence, explain, balance. I stopped waffling and started answering the question. My tutor’s mini case cards for rainforests, hot deserts and urban change were so useful on the day. I also learned to read graph axes properly (I used to miss the units!). I’m proud of how much clearer my writing became.

Sofia D.

Year 10 · Cambridge IGCSE

IB Geography (SL)

I wanted help to make my Paper 1 and 2 answers more concise. We practised turning notes into quick plans with the exact case data needed, nothing extra. My tutor gave me feedback codes so I could fix issues fast. For the IA, clarifying my methods and showing limitations made the difference. I finished the year feeling organised instead of stressed.

Wei-Lin J.

IB DP (SL) · IA & Papers

GCSE Geography

Geography used to be a list of facts for me. My tutor always asked “so what?” which pushed me to think about causes, consequences and players. We built a routine: retrieval warm-up, model answer, timed question, quick reflection. It kept me focused and I actually saw weekly progress. I hit my target grade and now I’m taking Geography for A Level.

Beth A.

Year 11 · WJEC Eduqas

A Level Geography

I needed to improve evaluation. My tutor taught me to weigh evidence, compare places and show uncertainty. We used sentence frames for judgement and I stopped sitting on the fence. For resource security, linking local to global scales helped my answers feel mature. I finished with a solid A and, honestly, a much better understanding of how to argue well.

Kira N.

Year 13 · OCR

IGCSE / International

Studying abroad, I worried my examples wouldn’t fit. My tutor helped me adapt local case studies and compare them with UK ones, which made my answers feel authentic and relevant. We also practised map skills and graph questions until they were automatic. By the exams I wasn’t guessing — I had a plan for every question type and finished with grades I’m genuinely proud of.

Yusuf A.

Year 11 · International School