Where the National Curriculum asks for more than ‘on-topic’
Monday of Week 2, Autumn 1, my Year 8s were happy to label photos of meanders but stumbled the moment I asked for a six-figure grid reference for the bend near Yarm. That’s the gap I see over and over: resources that cover rivers, coasts, or cities fine, but don’t speak the National Curriculum’s language—locational knowledge with OS maps, enquiry with real data, and explanations of processes.
Across KS2–KS3, the British pathway expects pupils to know where places are, understand how physical and human processes interact, and use skills (mapwork, GIS, fieldwork) to investigate. A glossy “Rivers 101” pack might be on-topic yet miss OS symbols, scale bars, or the enquiry cycle. I also see U.S.-centric materials (latitude/longitude only, no grid references) or GCSE-style exam tasks that jump the gun on command words.
When I need a starting point that already flags UK-specific terms and skills, the community geography library is where I look first—then I trim to our scheme of work and add local examples I trust. You can browse for a springboard in the geography library and adapt down to your key stage.