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SCHEME OF WORK
Geography
Form 3 2025
TERM III
School


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WK LSN TOPIC SUB-TOPIC OBJECTIVES T/L ACTIVITIES T/L AIDS REFERENCE REMARKS
3 1
Statistical Methods
Introduction and Compound Bar Graphs
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Analyse and interpret statistical data
Present statistical data using appropriate methods
Highlight steps followed when constructing compound/cumulative bar graphs
Find totals and cumulative totals for data
Q/A to review basic statistical concepts and simple bar graphs; Exposition of steps followed when constructing compound bar graphs; Guided activity using Table 1.1 crop production data; Practice finding cumulative totals and suitable scales
Graph paper, Rulers, Calculators, Table 1.1 crop production data
Secondary Geography Form 3 Student's Book, Pages 1-3
3 2
Statistical Methods
Compound Bar Graphs - Analysis and Construction Practice
Compound Bar Graphs - Interpretation and Advantages/Disadvantages
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Find suitable scale by considering largest and smallest values
Draw outline of each bar with components
Derive comprehensive key and label axes
Insert short and clear title
Exposition of scale selection and construction techniques; Drawing of compound bar graphs with proper shading; Detailed discussion on labeling and titling; Analysis of Fig. 1.1; Practice construction using Table 1.2 Kenya's export crops data
Colored pencils for shading, Construction materials, Table 1.2 data
Previously constructed graphs, Analysis worksheets
Secondary Geography Form 3 Student's Book, Pages 2-4
3 3
Statistical Methods
Proportional Circles - Construction Methods
Proportional Circles - Area Method and Analysis
Simple Pie Charts - Construction
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Construct proportional circles using diameter method
Round off totals to nearest thousand
Select suitable scale for diameters
Use radii figures to draw different circles
Students determine value of angles for variables; Exposition of proportional circles concept; Demonstration using Table 1.3 sugar production data; Guided calculation of radii using suitable scales; Drawing of circles using calculated radii
Calculators, Compasses, Table 1.3 sugar production data, Plain paper
Square root tables, Construction materials, Table 1.6 data
Protractors, Compasses, Land use data example, Colored pencils
Secondary Geography Form 3 Student's Book, Pages 3-5
3 4
Statistical Methods
Proportional Divided Circles - Construction
Pie Charts - Analysis and Interpretation
Advantages and Disadvantages of All Methods
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Find square root of totals for each set of data
Find suitable scale for radii of circles
Calculate percentages and angles as in simple pie charts
Draw circles using scale and insert details
Exposition of proportional divided circles concept; Detailed discussion using Table 1.9 mortality data; Step-by-step calculation of square roots and radii; Construction of multiple circles for countries X, Y, Z; Practice with proper segmentation and consistent shading
Table 1.9 mortality data, Square root tables, Construction materials
Constructed pie charts, Fig. 1.4 and Fig. 1.5 references, Analysis guidelines
Comparison charts, Various sample statistical presentations, Method evaluation criteria
Secondary Geography Form 3 Student's Book, Pages 6-9
3 5
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Distinction Between Oceans and Seas
Nature of Ocean Water - Salinity and Temperature
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Distinguish between oceans and seas based on size, location, and connection. Identify the four major oceans and their characteristics. Compare similarities and differences between oceans and seas.
Q/A to review water bodies from previous chapters. Discussion of ocean vs sea characteristics using world map. Students list major oceans and seas in exercise books.
Chalkboard, world map, atlas, exercise books
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, thermometer for demonstration
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 113-114
4 1
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Nature of Ocean Water - Ocean Life and Topography
Islands and Ocean Pollution
Water Movement - Vertical Movement
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe ocean life including plankton, nekton, and benthos. Explain ocean topography features: continental shelf, slope, abyssal plain, ridges, and trenches.
Discussion of marine organisms and their habitats. Drawing ocean floor profile on chalkboard showing topographical features. Students sketch ocean life zones.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, textbooks
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, atlas
Containers, warm and cold water, chalkboard, atlas
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 117-119
4 2
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Water Movement - Ocean Currents
Major Ocean Currents
Tides - Formation and Causes
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain ocean current formation by winds, earth's rotation, land masses, and temperature. Describe Coriolis effect and its impact on current direction. Distinguish between warm and cold currents.
Drawing ocean current formation diagrams on chalkboard. Discussion of Coriolis effect using globe demonstration. Students identify current types on world map.
Chalkboard, chalk, globe, world map, exercise books
World map, atlas, chalkboard, exercise books
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, stones for demonstration
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 122-124
4 3
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Types of Tides
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Distinguish between perigean, apogean, spring, and neap tides. Explain semi-diurnal, mixed, and diurnal tide patterns. Describe tidal significance for coastal activities.
Drawing different tide type diagrams on chalkboard. Discussion of tidal patterns with examples. Students create tidal cycle charts in notebooks.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, textbooks
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 127-128
4 4
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Wave Formation and Types
Wave Erosion Processes and Features
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain wave formation through wind friction on water surface. Describe wave components: crest, trough, wavelength, height. Distinguish between constructive and destructive waves.
Simple demonstration of wave formation using water basin and fan/breath. Drawing wave diagrams showing crest and trough. Discussion of wave breaking processes.
Water basin, chalkboard, chalk, exercise books
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, pictures from textbook
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 128-130
4 5
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Wave Transportation and Deposition
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain longshore drift process and material transportation. Describe factors influencing coastal deposition. Identify transportation mechanisms along coasts.
Simple demonstration of longshore drift using sand and water. Discussion of sediment sorting and deposition patterns. Students draw longshore drift diagrams.
Sand, water container, chalkboard, chalk, exercise books
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 134-135
5 1
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Coastal Depositional Features - Beaches and Spits
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe beach formation and characteristics. Explain spit formation at coastline direction changes. Identify beach features: ridges, cusps, berms, beach rock.
Discussion of beach formation conditions and processes. Drawing spit formation diagrams showing longshore drift effects. Students identify local beach examples.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, sand for demonstration
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 135-137
5 2
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Coastal Depositional Features - Bars and Other Features
Types of Coasts - Concordant and Discordant
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain bar formation: bay bars and offshore bars. Describe tombolo, cuspate foreland, mudflats, salt marshes, and dune belts formation.
Drawing different bar formation types on chalkboard. Discussion of lagoon formation behind bars. Students sketch various depositional features.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, textbooks
Atlas, chalkboard, chalk, exercise books
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 137-139
5 3
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Submerged Coasts - Highland and Lowland
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain submerged coast formation through base level changes. Describe rias, fjords, and Dalmatian coasts in highland areas. Identify fjards in lowland submergence.
Drawing submerged coast formation diagrams on chalkboard. Discussion of East African rias (Kilindini, Lamu). Students analyze submergence causes.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, maps of Kenya coast
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 140-142
5 4
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Emerged Coasts
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe emerged coast formation through sea level fall. Identify upland features: raised beaches, notches, wave-cut platforms. Explain lowland features: fall-lines, gentle coastal plains.
Discussion of emergence processes and resultant features. Analysis of Kenya coast examples (Mama Ngina Drive, Oceanic Hotel). Students draw emerged coast profiles.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, local examples
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 142-143
5 5
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Coral Coasts and Reef Formation
Types of Coral Reefs
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain coral polyp requirements for growth: temperature, clean water, shallow depth, salinity. Describe conditions favoring coral development.
Discussion of coral growth conditions and requirements. Analysis of tropical coral distribution patterns. Students list coral growth requirements.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, world map
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, atlas
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 143-144
6 1
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Coral Reef Formation Theories
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain Darwin's, Daly's, and Murray's theories of coral reef formation. Compare different explanations for barrier reef and atoll development.
Discussion of different coral formation theories with diagrams. Comparison of theory strengths and limitations. Students create theory comparison charts.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, textbooks
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 146-148
6 2
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Significance of Oceans - Economic Importance
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Explain ocean significance for climate modification, fishing, transport, and mineral extraction. Describe HEP generation from tides and tourism benefits.
Discussion of ocean economic activities and benefits. Analysis of global fishing grounds and shipping routes. Students list ocean economic uses.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, world map
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 148-149
6 3
OCEANS, SEAS AND THEIR COASTS
Significance of Coasts and Coastal Features
Unit Assessment
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe coastal benefits: ports, harbours, fishing grounds, tourism, building materials. Explain marine life habitats and transport challenges.
Discussion of coastal economic activities with Kenya examples. Analysis of port development and coastal tourism. Students evaluate coastal significance.
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, maps of Kenya
Assessment papers, atlas, exercise books, maps
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 149-150
6 4
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
Definition of Terms and Types of Deserts
Wind Erosion Processes
Wind Erosion Features - Small Scale
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
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, small stones for demonstration
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 151-152
6 5
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
7 1
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
Sand Dunes - Barchans and Seif Dunes
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:
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
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, world map
Chalkboard, chalk, exercise books, pictures from textbook
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 157-159
7 2
ACTION OF WIND AND WATER IN ARID AREAS
Pediments, Pediplains, and Plateau Features
Water Deposition Features and Dry Valleys
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
Maps of Kenya, chalkboard, chalk, exercise books
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 161-163
7 3
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
7 4
AGRICULTURE
Introduction and Definition of Agriculture
Physical Factors: Climate
Physical Factors: Relief and Soil
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
Maps showing climate zones, Rainfall charts, Pictures of crops, Thermometers
Soil samples, pH testing materials, Maps of Pampas and Prairies, Terraced farming pictures
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 232-233
7 5
AGRICULTURE
Biotic and Human Factors
Types of Agriculture: Simple Subsistence and Sedentary Agriculture
Intensive Subsistence Agriculture and Plantation Agriculture
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Identify biotic factors; Distinguish useful and destructive insects; Explain social factors; Analyze economic factors
Brainstorm local crop organisms; Discuss Desert Locust Control Organisation; Study on religious farming restrictions; Analyze coffee price effects
Pictures of pests, Insect specimens, Wilson Airport maps, Price charts
Maps of tropical lands, Slash-and-burn pictures, Farming systems diagrams
Monsoon Asia maps, Rice terraces pictures, Plantation distribution charts
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 238-242
8 1
AGRICULTURE
Mediterranean Agriculture, Mixed Farming, and Livestock Farming
Distribution of Major Cash Crops in Kenya
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
Describe Mediterranean agriculture regions; Explain farming aspects; Define mixed farming; Identify livestock farming types
Study Mediterranean regions; Analyze orchard farming, viticulture; Discuss mixed farming areas; Introduction to livestock types
Mediterranean maps, Olive grove pictures, Crop combination charts
Figure 13.7 map, Cash crop pictures, Colonial agriculture photos
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 248-252
8 2
AGRICULTURE
Tea Farming in Kenya
Tea Marketing and Sugar-cane Farming
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
KTDA charts, Figure 13.10 map, Factory pictures, Processing diagrams
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 253-257
8 3
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
8 4
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
8 5
AGRICULTURE
Wheat Growing and Horticulture
Pastoral Farming and Dairy Farming
Beef Farming and Agricultural Fieldwork
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
Figure 13.29 map, Pastoral pictures, Table 13.1, Cattle breed photos
Cattle breed pictures, Figure 13.40 Pampas map, Sample questionnaires, Data sheets
KLB Secondary Geography Form 3, Pages 283-299

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