Geography Paper 4 Flashcards-2
Geography Paper 4 Flashcards-2
Geography Paper 4 Flashcards-2
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Always tell an adult or teacher where you area carrying out coursework
Never do coursework near a river or the sea without an adult or teacher and without them
checking that it is safe
Don't display valuables making you more vulnerable to crime e.g. if you have a camera or a
phone keep it out of sight
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Subjective: when personal opinion has an influence on the outcome of the data collection.
Primary data: Any data that is personally collected by you. Primary data may include traffic
counts, pedestrian counts, environmental indexes, questionnaires or land use surveys.
Secondary data: Any data that has been collected by someone else. Secondary data collection
maybe found in books, on the internet, in academic journals, etc.
Census: a survey carried out by nearly all countries every 10 years. Is a very detailed survey
that is compulsory for everyone to fill in.
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Disadvantages
Advantages
Primary Data
Secondary Data
It is up to date (current)
You know how the data has been
collected i.e. what technique
Includes data relevant to coursework
Only covers your study area
Collected in the format that you want
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Quantitative data: Any data that involves figures. Is very easy to present and analyse however
it can be very general and excludes some data.
Qualitative data: This is written data or photographs. Tends to be individual/personal, and can
be hard to present and analyse. Often comes as results of interviews with open questions.
Pilot Survey: a test you carry out before data collection. Important to test forms to ensure you
ask right questions and forms contain all right categories. It is too expensive/time consuming
to go and collect data a second time, if you missed it the first time.
Sampling: a section or part of entire study area/population, representing the whol. Necessary
to only investigate sample due to time and money limitations.
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Systematic Sampling: When you collect data in a regular pattern. E.g. asking every 10th person
or collecting physical data after every 5 meters.
Random Sampling: When every area or person in your study area has an equal chance of
being selected or asked. Can be done by pulling names out of a hat, by using a random
Pros
Systematic
Cons
Random
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Open ended questions: questions that have infinite numbers of answers. The respondent has
no restriction on how they might answer
Closed questions: when there is a limited number of responses. These questions are often
multiple choice in style
Pros
Open-ended
Cons
Closed
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Advantage of Photographs
Disadvantage of Photographs
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selecting river load or beach material. Can put quadrat over area you want to sample and then
using a random number table or calculator, select a square to collect the sample from.
Callipers: used to measure width, depth or length of small objects like load.
Place object to be measured inside calliper and then close calliper and read
off measurement (cm/mm). Callipers are great for recording changes in a river's
load or changes in beach material.
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Clinometer: used for measuring slope angle (gradient). Used together with
ranging poles; place one ranging pole at top of a slope and one at bottom. Look
through clinometer, measuring angle from one ranging pole to another ranging
pole. To get an accurate angle, you take an up reading and a down reading.
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Transect: a line along which you take measurements. You may have a transect that runs from
rural-urban fringe to the CBD or a transect that runs from the sea in land through sand dunes.
Tally system: Fast, efficient to record, easy to read, easy to add up and total
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Strengths
Weaknesses
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Conclusion
Evaluation
investigation
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Measuring Velocity
Use floats
Stopwatch to time
River features
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across river
Measuring depth
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Synchronize timing
Systematic survey
Record/map
Add up total