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Studying geography at university
Simon Oakes
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Studying geography at university
Presentation outline
Key facts about geography degrees
Fairly famous geographers quiz
The T-shaped geographer
The geography knowledge base
The geography skills base
Geography career snapshots
Geography degree pathways
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Studying geography at university
Key facts
Geography-related degrees are offered by 80 UK universities.
30,000 people study geography at university (full or part-time).
Nearly 3,000 people study geography at postgraduate level.
Geography graduates are less likely to be unemployed after their degree
course than those studying any other social science subject including
economics.
The Labour Force Survey reports geography graduates earing an above-
average starting salary compared with all graduates.
Source: RGS-IBG website
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Studying geography at university
Fairly famous geographers quiz
Home secretary
and possible future prime
pinister
A well-known TV presenter and plate tectonics
expert
A modern landscape
poet (ask an English
teacher)
A 1990s current affairs
comedian
THERESA MAY
IAIN STEWART
SIMON ARMITAGE
HUGH DENNIS
Briefly discuss how the study of geography supports these roles.
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Studying geography at university
Geography is a broad discipline
Most geography degrees include a core of environmental management and
human geography (societies and governance).
Optional specialist areas are shown to the far left and right.
Natural science
(including applied
chemistry, physics, biology)
Environmental management
(e.g. climate change,
biodiversity, hazard risk &
resilience)
Societies and their
governance
(in applied global, national, urban and rural
contexts)
Place, culture and meaning
(e.g. cultural geography, historical
geography)
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Studying geography at university
The geography knowledge base
From an employers perspective, geography students are well-informed
about a range of contemporary topics.
Geography students know what the big issues and challenges are for
societies and businesses and are well-equipped to help manage an
organisation.
The next slide shows a Wordle analysis of the top news stories that featured
in the Financial Times newspaper in 2014. What geography topics can you
see? What does this tell you about the usefulness of geography?
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Studying geography at university
Content analysis of Financial Times 18 December 2018 http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/cf2036b8-86e6-11e4-8a51-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3TP3D64KL
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Studying geography at university
The geography skills base
Information handling (working quickly with new information)
Analytical prowess (making use of graphs and statistics)
Critical thinking and decision making (management contexts)
Structuring arguments (from extended essay writing)
Cultural agility (having experience of fieldwork in different settings and
contexts)
Team work (during fieldwork investigations)
Technology skills (using GIS and a range of software apps)
Project management (individual dissertation at university)
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Studying geography at university
The T-shaped geographer
A geography graduate has T-shaped
capabilities.
You'll have strong analytical skills, knowing how
to interpret conceptual and data-based
information. In a rapidly changing world your
understanding of how human environments
function globally and locally is highly marketable.
A knowledge of how to read future socioeconomic
trends and use computer modelling tools will be
of interest to many employers. (Geography
Review Vol. 28, No. 4)
Find out more about T-shaped people here
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Studying geography at university
Is he talking about geographers?
Googles chief economist, Hal Varian
The ability to take data to be able to understand it, to process it, to extract value from it, to visualize it, to communicate it thats going to be a hugely important skill in the next decades... Because now we really do have essentially free and ubiquitous data. So the scarce factor is the ability to understand that data and extract value from it. I do think those skillsof being able to access, understand, and communicate the insights you get from data analysis are going to be extremely important. Managers need to be able to access and understand the data themselves.
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Studying geography at university
Career snapshot 1
Many well-paid geographers work in finance, banking and insurance.
These industries rely on applied understanding of the geographical concepts of
connectivity and risk.
See Globalisation: a risky business (Geography Review Vol. 25, No. 4).
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Studying geography at university
Career snapshot 2
Geography graduates occupy
managerial positions with companies,
NGOs and government departments
that havesocial or environmental foci.
Geography graduates bring a valuable
mixture of knowledge and skills to the
role.
See: What can you do with a
geography degree (Geography
Review Vol. 28, No. 4).
Student perspective
Tom gained a BSc in geography from Oxford Brookes University and an MSc in environmental science from Kings College London. In 2010, Tom joined Thames Water on its graduate scheme. Today, he leads its Commercial Metering programme. Tom says:
Having the skill to concisely present complex situations into bite-size nuggets of knowledge that you can pass over to an audience in a digestible manner will set you out from the crowd. My geography degree focused on getting this right.
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Studying geography at university
Plenty of possibilities
Sectors Job titles
Advertising and arts Civil service Energy Environment Finance and insurance Law Leisure and tourism Marketing and media Overseas development Planning or public service Recruitment Voluntary sector Water resource management
Aid worker Cartographer Climate-change officer Commercial surveyor Emergency manager Fundraiser GIS analyst Hazard modeller Management consultant Market researcher Nature conservation officer Technician Town or transport planner
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Studying geography at university
Geography degree pathways to work
Geography degree
(BA, BSc)
Employment
Postgraduate degree in geography (MA, PhD)
Conversion course for
law or accountancy
Higher Education provides several pathways towards work: which might you consider?
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Studying geography at university
Further links
More about the employment rate for geography graduates:
http://www.hecsu.ac.uk/assets/assets/documents/wdgd_soc
ial_science_2014.pdf
An amusing look at life as a geographer:
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2014/03/24/why-
geography-best-subject-study-university_n_5020334.html
A newspapers view:
http://www.theguardian.com/money/2010/jun/19/human-
geography-graduate-careers
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Studying geography at university
This resource is part of Geography Review, a magazine written for A-level students by
subject experts. To subscribe to the full magazine go
to: http://www.hoddereducation.co.uk/geographyreview