Geography study guides
SG-N-LEVEL Β· GCE N-Level (Singapore) Β· aligned to SEAB.
- Climate Change overview for N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246): the natural and human causes, the evidence that the climate is warming, the impacts on people and the environment, and how people respond through mitigation and adaptation
An N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246) overview of Climate Change: the natural and human causes including the enhanced greenhouse effect, the main lines of evidence that the climate is warming, the impacts on people and the environment, and how people respond through mitigation and adaptation, with links to every dot point and a worked data-response walkthrough.
π 6 min readSEAB-2246 - Food Resources and Security overview for N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246): what food security means, the physical and human factors that affect food supply, the threats to food security, and the strategies countries use to achieve it
An N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246) overview of Food Resources and Security: what food security means including availability and access, the physical and human factors that affect food supply, the natural and human threats to food security, and the strategies countries use to achieve it, with links to every dot point and a worked data-response walkthrough.
π 6 min readSEAB-2246 - Geographical Skills and Investigations overview for N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246): reading maps and grid references, interpreting climate graphs and data, presenting and analysing data, and planning fieldwork
An N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246) overview of Geographical Skills and Investigations: reading topographic maps with grid references, scale and direction, interpreting climate graphs and data tables, choosing and analysing the right graphs, and planning fieldwork and data collection, with links to every dot point and a worked map-skills walkthrough.
π 7 min readSEAB-2246 - Global Tourism overview for N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246): the reasons for the rapid growth of tourism and its main types, the economic, social and environmental impacts, sustainable tourism, and tourism in Singapore and Southeast Asia
An N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246) overview of Global Tourism: the reasons for the rapid growth of tourism and its main types, the positive and negative economic, social and environmental impacts, what sustainable tourism means and how to achieve it, and tourism in Singapore and Southeast Asia, with links to every dot point and a worked data-response walkthrough.
π 6 min readSEAB-2246 - Living with Tectonic Hazards overview for N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246): the impacts of earthquakes and eruptions, why people live near hazards, how communities prepare and respond, and why impacts differ between places
An N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246) overview of Living with Tectonic Hazards: the social, economic and environmental impacts of earthquakes and eruptions, the difference between primary and secondary effects, why people stay near hazards, how communities prepare and respond, and why a similar hazard harms one place far more than another, with links to every dot point and a worked walkthrough.
π 6 min readSEAB-2246 - Plate Tectonics overview for N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246): the structure of the Earth, how plates move at divergent, convergent and transform boundaries, and how earthquakes and volcanoes form and are measured
An N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246) overview of Plate Tectonics: the layered structure of the Earth, how convection currents move the plates at divergent, convergent and transform boundaries, and how earthquakes and volcanoes form and are measured, with links to every dot point and a worked data-response walkthrough.
π 7 min readSEAB-2246 - Variable Weather and Changing Climate overview for N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246): the elements of weather and how they are measured, what controls temperature and rainfall, the equatorial and monsoon climates, and how tropical thunderstorms form
An N(A)-Level Geography (SEAB 2246) overview of Variable Weather and Changing Climate: the elements of weather and the instruments that measure them, the factors that control temperature and rainfall, the equatorial and monsoon climates, and how convectional thunderstorms form in the tropics, with links to every dot point and a worked climate-graph walkthrough.
π 7 min readSEAB-2246