What do you need to think about?
Fieldwork is when you go outside the classroom and find things out for yourself.
When carrying out fieldwork, you will need to think like a geographer. What is the fieldwork? Where and how will you carry it out? And why will you be doing it?
What?
- observe
- plan
- question
- research
Where?
- use maps and plans to explain where places are
How?
- collect and record data to explain what people, places and environments are like
- stay safe
Why?
- think about connections between human and physical features
- present your findings using maps, pictures, charts, diagrams and writing
Watch: Fieldwork at Hadrian's Wall
Investigating physical and human features
Fieldwork includes investigating both human and physical features.
Human features are things that have been built, such as:
- houses
- towns
- cities
- walls
- roads
Physical features are anything that has formed naturally and that humans haven鈥檛 made, such as:
- rivers
- lakes
- oceans
- volcanoes
- mountains
Watch: What might a fieldwork focus be?
There are lots of places to carry out fieldwork. You could choose your local area, a city or rural locations like forests and national parks. Watch this video from 成人论坛 Teach to get some ideas.
Sources
Information can be found in both primary and secondary sources.
Fieldwork involves collecting primary sources of information.
Primary sources of information are things that were collected at the time, and include:
- photographs
- diaries
- videos
Secondary sources of information are usually based on primary sources, such as:
- magazines
- textbooks
- guidebooks
- newspapers
Explore features and sources
Examples of human and physical features, and primary and secondary sources of information:
1 of 5
Hadrian's Wall: Did you know?
Hadrian鈥檚 Wall is not the border between England and Scotland.
The wall is 74 miles long, but only 10% of it can now be seen.
It took 15,000 soldiers around six years to build Hadrian鈥檚 Wall.
Activities
Activity 1: Why am I doing this fieldwork?
Look at a map and/or aerial image of where you are going.
- What features do you expect to see? Make a list.
- Add some questions for your enquiry. What do you want to find out? And why? Add this information as a brainstorm to your map or aerial image.
Activity 2: Quiz 鈥 Geographical fieldwork
Bitesize Primary games. gameBitesize Primary games
Play fun and educational primary games in science, maths, English, history, geography, art, computing and modern languages.
More on Fieldwork
Find out more by working through a topic
- count4 of 12