HSC Geography · People, Patterns and Processes · Teacher Resource

7.2 — Patterns of Settlement

Lesson plan & teaching sequence · NESA Geography Stage 6 (2022)
Teacher copy — includes answers
A dense mega-city at dusk — the scale of modern settlement. Illustrative (AI-generated).
A dense mega-city at dusk — the scale of modern settlement. Illustrative (AI-generated).

At a glance

Topic: People, Patterns and Processes — 7.2 (spatial patterns of settlement)
Duration: ~2 lessons (≈ 2 × 50 min)
Class: Year 11 Geography
Mode: Explicit teaching (deck) + activities + discussion

Syllabus mapping — People, Patterns and Processes (2022)

Content: Spatial patterns of settlement — urbanisation and the growth of cities and mega-cities; the distribution and evolution of settlements; the environmental impact of urban growth (within "Overview of the diversity and extent of human activity").

Outcomes

GE-11-01 spatial patterns & changeGE-11-02 processes across scalesGE-11-07 geographical tools & skillsGE-11-09 communicate geographically

Key concepts

Lesson sequence & timings

TimePhaseTeacher does / saysSlides
0–8'HookProject two images — an ancient/rural settlement vs a modern mega-city. "How did we get from one to the other, and where do most people live now?" Elicit the ~55% urban fact.1–2
8–22'UrbanisationTeach 7.2.1 with Fig 7.2.1. Stress the trend: ~30% (1950) → ~55% (2018) → UN projects ~68% by 2050. Activity 1 (describe the trend).3–4
22–35'Mega-citiesTeach 7.2.2. Definition (>10m), Tokyo ≈37m, Delhi/Shanghai. Activity 2 (define + examples).5–6
35–50'DistributionTeach 7.2.3 with Fig 7.2.3. Physical/economic/historical factors; concentration in Asia. Activity 3 (table).7–8
L2 0–15'FootprintTeach 7.2.4 (~3% land, ~70% CO₂; sustainable urban development). Activity 4 (evaluate).9–10
L2 15–35'Evolution & tradeTeach 7.2.5–7.2.6 with Fig 7.2.2 (village → Uruk → industrial → mega-city) and trade as engine. Discussion.11–14
L2 35–50'Origins + consolidateTeach 7.2.7 (Uruk). Activity 5 (key concepts) + exit ticket. Set homework.15–17

Activities & model answers

Activity 1 — Describe the urbanisation trend

A strong answer
States that the urban share rose steadily while the rural share fell; the two lines cross around 2007–2008 (~50/50); quotes approximate values (≈30% urban in 1950, ≈55% by 2018, UN projection ≈68% by 2050); and notes the change is a long-run upward trend, with most future growth in Asia & Africa.

Activity 2 — Define the mega-city

Key
(1) A mega-city is an urban area/agglomeration with a population of more than 10 million. (2) Any three of Tokyo, Delhi, Shanghai (also e.g. São Paulo, Mexico City, Cairo, Mumbai). (3) They concentrate people, capital, infrastructure and decision-making — major nodes in the global economy.

Activity 3 — Explain the distribution

Look for
Physical: coasts/harbours (New York, Shanghai, Tokyo), rivers/fertile plains. Economic: trade routes, jobs, resources. Historical/political: capitals, colonial ports. Uneven because these advantages are unevenly spread — note the strong concentration in Asia.

Activity 4 — Evaluate the environmental footprint

Model
Agrees cities are heavy consumers (≈3% of land but ≈70% of energy-related CO₂, UN); but argues density enables solutions (green infrastructure, public/active transport, renewables, efficient shared infrastructure) so the footprint can be smaller per person than sprawl. A strong answer reaches a judgement, not just a list.

Activity 5 — Key concepts

Indicative
Space = cities cluster unevenly on coasts/rivers; Scale = settlements range from village to 10m+ mega-city; Interconnection = trade/flows grow cities; Change = the world shifted from ~30% to a projected ~68% urban; Sustainability = urban design determines the environmental footprint.

Key questioning (with answers)

Differentiation

  • Support: pre-labelled graph axes for Activity 1; sentence starters for the evaluation ("Cities are… however…").
  • Extension: compare two mega-cities in different regions (e.g. Tokyo vs Lagos) on growth rate and challenges; research a primate city.
  • EAL/D: visual glossary (urbanisation, mega-city, distribution, footprint, surplus, agglomeration).

Assessment & homework

  • Exit ticket: define a mega-city + one reason cities cluster where they do.
  • Homework: the Activity 4 evaluation, written up; research a local urban area's growth. Read ahead to the next chapter.

Useful resources & recent data

Teaching note — data currency & accuracy. The source lesson framed the projection as "by 2030"; update this to the current UN framing — the world passed ~55% urban around 2018 and the UN projects ~68% urban by 2050 (UN DESA, World Urbanization Prospects). Present all projections as UN estimates, not certainties. Keep ancient-city dates and populations general (Uruk is an illustrative early example). Figures here are illustrative schematics — use the Our World in Data charts for the live figures.
Provenance: converted from Bill's earlier "Patterns of Settlement" lesson; facts re-verified to public sources (mega-city = >10m; UN ~68% urban by 2050; Tokyo ≈37m; Uruk, Mesopotamia). Outdated "by 2030" projection updated to current UN framing. No textbook images reproduced — figures redrawn as inline SVG.

🎦 Teaching-presentation — answer & discussion guide

Model points for the reflection, research & essay tasks in 7.2 Settlement's teaching deck (_teaching.html). Not exhaustive — students should reason & use evidence.

Reflect — mega-cities: solution or problem?
Research — a growing city

Look for: a real growth rate + cause (migration + natural increase); one benefit + one challenge; a genuine city response (metro, new towns, upgrading).

Essay — settlement pattern & process

Reward: distribution described with map + data; processes (migration, economic pull); effects (footprint, informal settlements); links to change & sustainability.

Rose Bay Secondary College · HSC Geography · People, Patterns and Processes — 7.2 teacher lesson plan · NESA Stage 6 (2022) · HSC 2026