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WK | LSN | TOPIC | SUB-TOPIC | OBJECTIVES | T/L ACTIVITIES | T/L AIDS | REFERENCE | REMARKS |
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1 |
School opening and Revision |
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2 | 1 |
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
|
Definition of Terms and Types of Deserts
Wind Erosion Processes |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define arid lands and aridity as areas receiving less than 250mm annual rainfall. Classify deserts: hot continental interior, coastal, mid-latitude, and ice/snow deserts. Identify examples globally and in Kenya (ASAL areas, Chalbi, Kaisut, Karoli). |
Q/A to review climate and aridity concepts from Form 2. Discussion of world desert distribution using atlas. Students list desert types and examples in exercise books.
|
Chalkboard, world map, atlas, exercise books
Sand, small container, chalkboard, chalk, exercise books |
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 151-152
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2 | 2 |
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
|
Wind Erosion Features - Small Scale
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe formation of "millet seed" sand grains, rock pedestals (gours), and ventifacts. Explain undercutting and abrasion effects up to 2 meters above ground. Include dreinkanter formation. |
Drawing formation diagrams of small-scale erosional features on chalkboard. Discussion of differential erosion on hard and soft rocks. Students sketch feature formation stages.
|
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, small stones for demonstration
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 153-155
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2 | 3 |
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
|
Wind Erosion Features - Large Scale
Wind Transportation and Deposition |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain formation of mushroom blocks, zeugens, yardangs, and deflation hollows. Describe large-scale erosional features with examples like Mukarob rock in Namibia and Qattara Depression in Egypt. |
Drawing large-scale erosional feature formation on chalkboard. Discussion of vertical vs horizontal rock structures. Analysis of feature distribution in world deserts.
|
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, atlas
Sand, fan or strong breath, chalkboard, chalk, exercise books |
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 155-157
|
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2 | 4 |
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
|
Sand Dunes - Barchans and Seif Dunes
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe barchan formation around obstacles creating crescent shapes. Explain seif dune development as parallel ridges aligned with prevailing winds. Give examples from Sahara, Arabian deserts, and Kenya (Lamu, Chalbi). |
Drawing detailed barchan and seif dune formation diagrams on chalkboard. Discussion of wind direction effects on dune shapes. Students model dune formation with sand.
|
Sand, small obstacles, chalkboard, chalk, exercise books
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 157-159
|
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2 | 5 |
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
|
Other Dune Types, Draas, and Loess
Water Action in Arid Areas - Wadis and Inselbergs |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain transverse and wake dune formation. Describe draas as large dune features up to 200m high. Define loess as fine-grained wind-deposited soil with examples from Europe, China, and Americas. |
Discussion of various dune types and their wind conditions. Analysis of global loess distribution and agricultural importance. Students compare different depositional features.
|
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, world map
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, pictures from textbook |
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 159-160
|
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3 | 1 |
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
|
Pediments, Pediplains, and Plateau Features
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain pediment formation as gently sloping rock surfaces through lateral planation or slope retreat. Describe pediplain development through coalescence of pediments. Explain mesa and butte formation from resistant-capped plateaus. |
Drawing pediment and pediplain formation sequences on chalkboard. Discussion of differential erosion on sedimentary rocks. Students analyze plateau evolution stages.
|
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, textbooks
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 161-163
|
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3 | 2 |
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
|
Water Deposition Features and Dry Valleys
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe alluvial fan and bajada formation at upland feet. Explain playa and salina development in basins. Identify dry river valleys (laghs/lagas) common in northern Kenya counties. |
Discussion of seasonal water flow and deposition patterns. Analysis of Kenya's northern dry valleys with county examples. Students map regional examples of water features.
|
Maps of Kenya, chalkboard, chalk, exercise books
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 163-164
|
|
3 | 3 |
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
|
Water Deposition Features and Dry Valleys
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe alluvial fan and bajada formation at upland feet. Explain playa and salina development in basins. Identify dry river valleys (laghs/lagas) common in northern Kenya counties. |
Discussion of seasonal water flow and deposition patterns. Analysis of Kenya's northern dry valleys with county examples. Students map regional examples of water features.
|
Maps of Kenya, chalkboard, chalk, exercise books
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 163-164
|
|
3 | 4 |
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
|
Significance of Arid Features
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain positive significance: solar energy potential, mineral resources, tourism attractions, unique ecosystems. Describe negative impacts: sand dune migration, agricultural threats, water scarcity challenges, settlement difficulties. |
Discussion of arid area opportunities and challenges with global and local examples. Analysis of Kenya's ASAL development potential and problems. Students evaluate significance balance.
|
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, pictures of solar panels
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 164-165
|
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3 | 5 |
Action of Water in Limestone Areas
|
Surface and Underground Water
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe processes leading to surface and underground water. Distinguish between surface and underground water types. Identify sources of underground water including rain, snow melt, lake/sea water, and magmatic water. Define water table, aquifer and aquifuge. Explain factors affecting occurrence of underground water. |
Q/A to review hydrological cycle processes. Exposition on underground water as "body of water derived from percolation and contained in soil, sub-soil and underlying rocks above impermeable layer". Discussion on surface water types and saltiness from weathering. Detailed explanation of water infiltration through permeable rocks and joints/faults. Discussion on factors affecting occurrence including precipitation, evaporation, porosity, permeability, slope, vegetation, saturation levels, evapotranspiration.
|
Charts showing water sources, Rock samples, Diagrams of percolation and water table, Transparent containers
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 166-170
|
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4 | 1 |
Action of Water in Limestone Areas
|
Features Resulting from Underground Water
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify features resulting from underground water: springs, wells, artesian basins and wells. Describe spring formation in well-jointed limestone, at scarp slopes, and spring-lines. Explain well construction and distinguish permanent, intermittent and dry wells. Define artesian basin structure and conditions for artesian well location. |
Exposition on springs as "natural outflow of water from rocks" with formation methods in limestone areas. Discussion on bournes as intermittent streams in chalk areas. Explanation of wells as "holes sunk into permeable rock to reach water table" using textbook diagrams. Detailed discussion on artesian basin structure and examples including London Basin, Great Australian Basin, Sahara, Kalahari.
|
Topographical maps, Geological cross-sections, Textbook diagrams, 3D models, World maps
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 170-172
|
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4 | 2 |
Action of Water in Limestone Areas
|
Features Resulting from Underground Water
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify features resulting from underground water: springs, wells, artesian basins and wells. Describe spring formation in well-jointed limestone, at scarp slopes, and spring-lines. Explain well construction and distinguish permanent, intermittent and dry wells. Define artesian basin structure and conditions for artesian well location. |
Exposition on springs as "natural outflow of water from rocks" with formation methods in limestone areas. Discussion on bournes as intermittent streams in chalk areas. Explanation of wells as "holes sunk into permeable rock to reach water table" using textbook diagrams. Detailed discussion on artesian basin structure and examples including London Basin, Great Australian Basin, Sahara, Kalahari.
|
Topographical maps, Geological cross-sections, Textbook diagrams, 3D models, World maps
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 170-172
|
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4 | 3 |
Action of Water in Limestone Areas
|
Importance of Underground Water
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain ways underground water is important to humankind and countries. Give specific examples of underground water significance including settlement, irrigation, domestic/industrial supply, geothermal energy, mineral deposits. |
Brain storming on underground water uses. Detailed discussion on importance aspects including settlement sites like spring-line settlements, irrigation in dry areas like Sahara oases, domestic/industrial water like Mzima Springs supplying Mombasa, river sources in Kenyan Highlands, geothermal power like Olkaria near Naivasha, mineral deposits like salt at Homa Hills, underground streams keeping lakes fresh like Lake Naivasha.
|
Photographs of key sites, Maps of Kenya, Case study materials, Charts showing applications
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 172-173
|
|
4 | 4 |
Action of Water in Limestone Areas
|
Action of Water in Limestone Areas and Resultant Features
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define karst as area with limestone, chalk or dolomite. Explain chemical processes forming carbonic acid and calcium bicarbonate. Identify conditions for karst development. Describe surface features: grikes/clints, swallow holes, dolines, uvalas, poljes, gorges. Describe underground features: caves, underground rivers, stalactites, stalagmites, limestone pillars. |
Q/A to review limestone characteristics from Form 1. Exposition on karst origin and chemical equations. Discussion on development conditions including jointed rocks, humid climate, deep water table. Progressive explanation of surface features using textbook diagrams and formation table. Exposition on underground features with stalactite/stalagmite formation processes. Examples from various countries including Kenya's Marafa Cave.
|
Limestone samples, Weak acids, Sequential diagrams, Clay for modeling, Salt solution setup, Cave photographs, Safety equipment
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 172-178
|
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4 | 5 |
Action of Water in Limestone Areas
|
Significance of Resultant Features
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain significance of karst landscape features to humankind and countries. Analyze positive and negative impacts of karst features. Evaluate economic importance of limestone areas including tourism, water supply challenges, industrial uses, grazing potential. |
Probing questions on karst landscape significance. Detailed discussion on significance aspects including tourism attractions like caves and gorges, solution lakes providing water sources, water scarcity due to intermittent streams, infrastructure development challenges, limestone use in iron/steel industry, grazing suitability for sheep, cement production like Bamburi and Athi River factories, environmental management challenges. Q/A on sustainable use of limestone resources. Topic assessment.
|
Economic charts, Photographs of industries, Tourism materials, Infrastructure maps, Assessment worksheets
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 178-179
|
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5 | 1 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Introduction and Definition of Agriculture
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define agriculture as growing crops and rearing livestock for human needs; Identify factors influencing agriculture; Explain scope of agricultural activities |
Q/A on local farming; Discussion on agriculture definition; List agricultural activities; Introduction to influencing factors
|
Charts showing agricultural activities, Pictures of crops and livestock, Map of Kenya
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 232-233
|
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5 | 2 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Physical Factors: Climate
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain climate as highest influence factor; Describe temperature effects on crop maturity; Analyze moisture distribution for cotton and tea; Explain wind effects on crops |
Review climatic elements; Discussion on pyrethrum quality and sunshine; Analysis of moisture requirements (750mm cotton); Study of Mediterranean citrus adaptation
|
Maps showing climate zones, Rainfall charts, Pictures of crops, Thermometers
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 233-236
|
|
5 | 3 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Physical Factors: Relief and Soil
Biotic and Human Factors |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe relief types; Explain lowland cultivation advantages; Analyze soil composition and weathering; Evaluate soil properties |
Q/A on relief and mechanization; Study lowland advantages in Monsoon Asia; Examine soil formation from rocks; Discuss hygroscopic water and temperature
|
Soil samples, pH testing materials, Maps of Pampas and Prairies, Terraced farming pictures
Pictures of pests, Insect specimens, Wilson Airport maps, Price charts |
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 236-238
|
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5 | 4 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Types of Agriculture: Simple Subsistence and Sedentary Agriculture
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define simple subsistence farming; Identify local names (Milpa, Counco, Roca, Masole, Citemene, Ladang); Describe shifting cultivation characteristics |
Study shifting cultivation practices; Discuss slash-and-burn agriculture; Analyze sedentary agriculture; Compare farming implements
|
Maps of tropical lands, Slash-and-burn pictures, Farming systems diagrams
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 242-244
|
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5 | 5 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Intensive Subsistence Agriculture and Plantation Agriculture
Mediterranean Agriculture, Mixed Farming, and Livestock Farming |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe intensive subsistence in Monsoon Asia; Explain wet padi cultivation; Define plantation agriculture; Identify plantation crops |
Study oriental agriculture; Analyze farm sizes and cropping; Study of plantation areas; Discuss foreign ownership
|
Monsoon Asia maps, Rice terraces pictures, Plantation distribution charts
Mediterranean maps, Olive grove pictures, Crop combination charts |
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 244-248
|
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6 | 1 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Distribution of Major Cash Crops in Kenya
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify cash crop locations from Figure 13.7; Explain colonial agriculture legacy; Describe government support for small-scale farmers |
Review Kenya's agricultural history; Study Figure 13.7 distribution; Discuss colonial vs post-independence farming; Analyze policy changes
|
Figure 13.7 map, Cash crop pictures, Colonial agriculture photos
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 252-253
|
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6 | 2 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Tea Farming in Kenya
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify tea growing highlands; Explain growing conditions (21°C, 1000-2000mm, 1000-1700m); Describe cultivation and processing |
Study Figure 13.8 tea areas; Discuss tea varieties; Analyze cultivation process; Step-by-step processing at 100°C
|
Figure 13.8 map, Plantation pictures, Processing flow chart, Tea samples
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 253-257
|
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6 | 3 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Tea Marketing and Sugar-cane Farming
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain KTDA role (260,000 farmers); Describe export destinations; Identify sugar-cane belt; Explain growing conditions |
Discuss KTDA achievements; Study Figure 13.10 sugar areas; Analyze out-grower schemes; Sugar processing and uses
|
KTDA charts, Figure 13.10 map, Factory pictures, Processing diagrams
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 257-262
|
|
6 | 4 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Maize Growing and Cocoa in Ghana
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify maize areas and Katumani variety; Describe growing conditions; Identify Ghana cocoa triangle; Explain cocoa conditions |
Study Figure 13.14 maize areas; Discuss Portuguese introduction; Analyze Ghana cocoa using Figure 13.15; Cocoa processing to export
|
Figure 13.14 map, Maize pictures, Figure 13.15 Ghana map, Processing charts
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 262-270
|
|
6 | 5 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Maize Growing and Cocoa in Ghana
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify maize areas and Katumani variety; Describe growing conditions; Identify Ghana cocoa triangle; Explain cocoa conditions |
Study Figure 13.14 maize areas; Discuss Portuguese introduction; Analyze Ghana cocoa using Figure 13.15; Cocoa processing to export
|
Figure 13.14 map, Maize pictures, Figure 13.15 Ghana map, Processing charts
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 262-270
|
|
7 | 1 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Oil Palm in Nigeria and Coffee Farming
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe oil palm areas and conditions; Identify coffee regions in Kenya; Explain growing conditions and processing |
Study oil palm distribution; Analyze tenera variety yields; Coffee processing steps; Compare with Brazil's Fazendas
|
Oil palm pictures, Figure 13.18 coffee map, Processing charts, pH testing materials
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 270-283
|
|
7 | 2 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Wheat Growing and Horticulture
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify wheat areas and conditions; Compare with Canada's advantages; Define horticulture; Identify horticultural areas |
Study Figure 13.20 wheat areas; Analyze Canadian Prairie advantages; Discuss horticultural companies; Export market analysis
|
Figure 13.20 map, Harvester pictures, Figure 13.25 horticulture map, Export charts
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 283-299
|
|
7 | 3 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Pastoral Farming and Dairy Farming
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe nomadic pastoralism areas and groups; Explain characteristics; Identify dairy farming regions using Table 13.1 |
Study Figure 13.29 pastoral patterns; Discuss government improvements; Analyze Table 13.1 distribution; Study dairy breeds
|
Figure 13.29 map, Pastoral pictures, Table 13.1, Cattle breed photos
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 299-313
|
|
7 | 4 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Pastoral Farming and Dairy Farming
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe nomadic pastoralism areas and groups; Explain characteristics; Identify dairy farming regions using Table 13.1 |
Study Figure 13.29 pastoral patterns; Discuss government improvements; Analyze Table 13.1 distribution; Study dairy breeds
|
Figure 13.29 map, Pastoral pictures, Table 13.1, Cattle breed photos
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 299-313
|
|
7 | 5 |
AGRICULTURE
|
Beef Farming and Agricultural Fieldwork
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Compare traditional and commercial beef farming; Describe Argentina's Pampas system; Plan agricultural fieldwork |
Analyze KMC operations; Study Argentine estancias; Discuss Kaputiei Scheme; Practice fieldwork planning
|
Cattle breed pictures, Figure 13.40 Pampas map, Sample questionnaires, Data sheets
|
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 313-327
|
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8 |
Exams and school closing |
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