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Lecture notes

A-level OCR geography GEOGRAPHICAL SKILLS

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Excel in Geographical skills with these skill-focused revision notes, crafted specifically for OCR A-level Geography (H481). Whether you're preparing for an exam or strengthening your geographical understanding throughout the year, this resource enhances your ability to interpret data presentation, data in general and apply key concepts with precision (developed by a consistently A/A* achieving student). What's inside: -Simplified breakdowns of migration dynamics and global trends -In-depth examples from ACs, EDCs, and LIDCs, backed by current data -Insight into migration strategies, geopolitical tensions, and refugee flows -Essential vocabulary to elevate your exam responses -Organised to mirror OCR requirements for efficient, targeted revision

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Uploaded on
September 5, 2025
Number of pages
10
Written in
2025/2026
Type
Lecture notes
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Geographical Skills

Geographical information

 a) Understand what makes data geographical

o Data becomes geographical when it is linked to location,
space, or place.

o Includes both physical features (e.g. river discharge, rainfall,
soil type) and human aspects (e.g. migration flows,
deprivation levels, land use).

o Spatial context is essential: not just “what” but “where” and
often “why there?”.

o Example: Air quality data is geographical when mapped across
an urban area, allowing for analysis of spatial patterns and
inequalities.

 b) Ethical and socio-political implications of collecting,
studying, and representing geographical data

o Ethics: Respecting confidentiality (e.g. anonymising survey
respondents), gaining informed consent, avoiding bias, not
misrepresenting results.

o Socio-political issues: Who controls the data? Could it
marginalise or stereotype certain communities? Power
dynamics in data collection (e.g. researchers from outside a
community may misinterpret findings).

o Example: Census data—valuable for planning services, but
sensitive in terms of privacy, minority group representation,
and political decision-making.

 c) Understand the nature of and use different types of
geographical information

o Qualitative: Descriptive, subjective data (interviews,
photographs, field sketches, oral histories). Good for exploring
perceptions and sense of place.

o Quantitative: Numerical, measurable data (population
figures, rainfall totals, crime statistics). Allows statistical
analysis and comparison.

o Primary: Data collected firsthand (field surveys,
questionnaires, river velocity readings).

, o Secondary: Data obtained from other sources (census
records, satellite images, academic studies).

o Images/maps/diagrams/graphs: Visual tools to represent
spatial patterns (choropleth maps, GIS maps, flow diagrams,
scatter plots).

o Factual text: Objective accounts such as reports,
government documents.

o Discursive/creative material: Literature, art, or media
representations of place. Useful for studying lived
experiences.

o Digital data: Remotely sensed data (satellite imagery, drone
surveys, LiDAR), open-source online datasets (Google Earth,
ArcGIS).

o Numerical and spatial data: Statistics tied to geographic
coordinates (crime density per ward, GPS data from
movement tracking).

o Innovative forms of data: Crowd-sourced (e.g.
OpenStreetMap, Twitter geotagging), big data (mobile phone
movement patterns, real-time transport data).

 d) Collect, analyse and interpret such information

o Selecting appropriate methods (surveys for perceptions, flow
meters for river discharge, GIS for land-use analysis).

o Analytical approaches must fit the data: statistical tests for
quantitative; coding/interpretation for qualitative.

o Recognising limitations (sample size, representativeness,
accuracy).

 e) Critical questioning of data sources, methodologies,
reporting and presentation

o Ask: Who produced the data and why? What are the
limitations or biases?

o Identify errors: sampling bias, equipment error, temporal
variations, misclassification.

o Recognise misuse: cherry-picking data, misleading graphs,
correlation vs causation.
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Leyla's A-level Master Notes in CS and GEO!

Welcome to my store, your destination for academically rigorous, exam-focused resources tailored for AQA A-Level Computer Science and OCR Geography who achieves A/A* consistently . Curated by a high-achieving student from Bedford College, these notes are designed to elevate your understanding and performance. Each document is: - Aligned with current specifications and mark schemes - Structured for efficient revision and deep comprehension - Enriched with case studies, and technical terminology - Ideal for students aiming for top grades and conceptual clarity

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