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A case study exploring how Year 7 pupils’ understanding of India can influence their conceptions of place

Megan Thorpe

(PGCE Secondary Geography, 2019-2020)

Email: meganjanethorpe@hotmail.com

Abstract

This research explores how Year 7 pupils’ understanding of India can influence their conceptions of place. Findings reveal that pupils expected to learn about distant place through comparison to their own experience, a customary technique in both primary and secondary geography education, which fosters a binary understanding of the world, reinforcing ideas of ‘us and them’. By explicitly discussing the complexities of representation, place, and everyday life – concepts not usually addressed until A-level – pupils were able to dispel the idea of ‘a single story’, and began to develop empathetic understanding of the diverse reality of everyday life in distant places. India served as a contextual backdrop for their learning, and as they were exposed to more and more contemporary images and facts about India, the more they moved towards a continuum, rather than binary approach (Picton, 2008), and began to think in more relational terms (Martin, 2013).

Copyright: © 2021. This paper is copyright of the author. (Please read the Journal's copyright information page by using the menu to the left of this page.)

The full paper is available for download as a pdf file: 115-146thorpem

Citation: Thorpe, M. (2021) 'A case study exploring how Year 7 pupils’ understanding of India can influence their conceptions of place' Journal of Trainee Teacher Educational Research, Volume 12 pp.115-146. https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.83621