Tuesday, 29 November 2022

Congratulations to Alan Kinder

The GA's Chief Exective, Alan Kinder has been awarded an Honorary Fellowship by the Royal Scottish Geographical Society.

The certificate was presented by the current GA President: Professor Alastair Owens earlier this month.

Well done to Alan. I was presented with Honorary Fellowship myself back in 2013, when I also received their Joy Tivy Education Medal.



Image: Alan Parkinson, shared under CC license 

GTE Conference 2023

Geography Teacher Educators Conference 2023

Trinity College Dublin

27th – 29th of January 2023


I have attended quite a few GTE Conferences over the years. Unfortunately I am going to have to prioritise the GA Conference and the Charney Manor Conference this year, but I recommend this event to you, and the venue is a lovely one. 

The GA has helped with the administration of this event, and numerous former GA Presidents have spoken at the event. I've always offered a session when attending over the years, which have included talking about ERASMUS and also the development of my GA Presidents blog.

I've done a couple of events in Dublin over the years including a Google Teachers' Institute and a trip for the Geography of Happiness project with Simon Renshaw.

The GTE brings together researchers, lecturers and teachers involved in research and scholarship in Geography Teacher Education.

The draft programme is below so that you can see rough timings. Conference fee includes all coffees and lunches within Trinity College. 

Well done to the conference team for putting the programme together.
  
Friday 27th January 2023

• 15:30 Welcome and coffee in the Education Department in the Arts Building, TCD – included

• 16:00-17:30 Session A: 6 presentations of 15 minutes

• 17:30-18:30 Keynote 1: Dr Ruth McManus, President of the Geographical Society of Ireland and
Associate Professor in Historical Geography at Dublin City University


• 18:30-20:00: Break

• 20:30 Dinner and networking upstairs at Café Amore, George’s Street – €20 (approximately £17)

• 22:00 Optional pint of Guinness in the Stag’s Head – cost €7 (approximately £5)

• Return to accommodation

Saturday 28th January 2022

• 8:00-9:00 Breakfast at the hotel or elsewhere

• 9:30-11:00 Session: 6 presentations of 15 minutes

• 11:00 Coffee – included

• 11:00-11:45 Session: Lived experiences of Geography in Ireland, from a panel of ITE student geography teachers

• 11:45-12:45 Keynote 2: Zainab Boladale TV presenter on RTÉ, Ireland’s National Broadcaster

• 12:45-13:30 Lunch - included

• 13:30-14:30 Session: 4 presentations of 15 minutes

• 15:00-15:30 Coffee break – included

• 15:30-!6:30 Session: 4 presentations of 15 minutes

• 16:30-18:30 Tour of Trinity College followed by reception in the Department of Geography, Museum

Building hosted by Professor Iris Moeller, Head of Geography

• 18:30 Dinner at the Cedar Tree, St Andrew St, Dublin 2 – cost €30 (approx. £27)

• Return to accommodation

Sunday 29th January 2023

• 8:00-9:00 Breakfast at accommodation

• 9:30-11:00 Session: 6 presentations of 15 minutes

• 11:00 Coffee – included

• 11:30-13:00 Session: 6 presentations of 15 minutes

• 13:00-14:00 Lunch and future plans for GTE – included

• 14:00 Optional trip to the National Museum of Dublin: Antiquities and National Museum of Dublin: Natural History Museum www.museum.ie/en-ie/home All free admission

Conference costs

• Hotel - €120 (approximately £100) per night, includes breakfast

Conference Fee:
Face to face 2 days - £140 or Conference, 3 days – £160, includes coffees and lunches

Online – £60


Accommodation and some meals (and the Guinness) extra.


Image: A pint of Guinness in Dublin, Alan Parkinson, shared under CC license

Saturday, 19 November 2022

Are we really Prisoners of Geography?

The piece mentions Sir Halford MacKinder, GA President in 1916.


In a 1904 paper, The Geographical Pivot of History, Mackinder gazed at a relief map of the world and posited that history could be seen as a centuries-long struggle between the nomadic peoples of Eurasia’s plains and the seafaring ones of its coasts. Britain and its peers had thrived as oceanic powers, but, now that all viable colonies were claimed, that route was closed and future expansion would involve land conflicts. The vast plain in the “heart-land” of Eurasia, Mackinder felt, would be the centre of the world’s wars.

Definitely a theme worth discussing to this day...

Recent events in Ukraine can be discussed with reference to this.

Thursday, 17 November 2022

GA Blog

 New on the GA website.

The GA Blog is now up and running with a soft launch followed by an appearance on the home page of the GA.

I wrote the opening post on the blog, all about blogging itself, and why I do it so much and several others have now been added.

This is an opportunity for those who have not been published by the GA or in other formats to share their thoughts on a particular area of the discipline or to otherwise get their ideas out there on a public forum without needing to set up a blog themselves and commit to regular posts and updating a website.


If you have an idea for a blog post that you would like to contribute, particularly if you have never written anything for the GA before, then please get in touch and I'll forward your idea to the team at Solly Street.

Thursday, 10 November 2022

Geography advocacy around Fieldwork

Many previous GA Presidents had strong connections with fieldwork. 

The GA has recently teamed up with strategic partners and the RGS-IBG to provide feedback to OFQUAL about fieldwork entitlements for students.

Sunday, 6 November 2022

Keltie, Mill and de Rougemont and the Australian affair

A find in the GA archives from the papers of Hugh Robert Mill - correspondence with Leonard Huxley. It seems he and John Scott Keltie were drawn into a strange affair involving an apparent trip made to Australia which was reported in a magazine.

This website provides a little more detail on the controversy, which included an apparent sport called turtle riding.

De Rougemont’s story begins with his birth as Henri Louis Grin, in Switzerland in 1847. In 1875 Grin came to Australia where he bought the pearling cutter, Ada. The vessel was reported missing in 1877 and the wreck discovered several months later near Cooktown. But what had happened to Ada’s master? Grin’s story of survival was incredible: he made claims to have sailed 3000 miles as the sole survivor of an attack by Aborigines at Lacrosse Island.

After this incident Grin moved regularly, changing jobs and identities. He married and then deserted his wife, Eliza. He worked as a dishwasher, waiter and photographer. 
In New Zealand he resurfaced as a spiritualist before arriving in England in 1898. 

Emerging now as Louis de Rougemont, Grin reinvented himself and his story to a fascinated public. The Adventures of Louis de Rougemont as Told by Himself was published in 1899 and contained incredible tales of his adventures as a castaway in North-West and Central Australia.

De Rougemont’s book was an instant sensation – and caused a huge uproar. He began touring and giving lectures to scientific and exploration societies such as the British Association for the Advancement of Science where he was greeted with fascination and, of course, disbelief. 

De Rougemont refused to demonstrate the Aboriginal language skills he professed to have learnt and could not specify on a map where his adventures had taken place. Among the stories so vividly described in his book were tales of single-handedly fighting alligators, the devoted deeds of his Aboriginal wife Yamba and his horror of cannibal feasts. Of all of the fantastic stories included in de Rougemont’s ‘memoir’, however, the one that caused the biggest outcry by far was his claim to have ridden turtles – many believed this to be simply impossible.

There is more about him here. It sounds like a tale worth following up.

Sunday, 16 October 2022

Avril

Spotted in an antiquarian book sale... by Hilaire Belloc, former GA President.

Sunday, 9 October 2022

GA Presidential election for 2024-5

According to this UCL research paper:

Figures from 2019 show that 85.6% of all teachers and 65.4% of pupils are currently from a White British background; in comparison, 78.5% of the working age population of England were recorded as White British in the 2011 census 

(UK Government, 2020).

To date, 100% of GA Presidents have been 'White British' (with the occasional French-born President, and others born overseas). 

This needs to change.

If you would like to be involved in changing this narrative, we are now looking for the next GA President after Denise Freeman, who will be President in 2023-4. 

Nominations need to be in by the 1st of November.

You will see that there are also some other vacancies which we would welcome applicants.

Geographers' Gaze Project

I worked on this project with Peter Fox, another former President for over a year and a half on and off, with several meetings at Solly Street and some other work remotely.

Isabel Richardson had done a great deal of preparatory work at Solly Street on the lantern slide collection, which used to number in the tens of thousands. Isabel had been cataloguing the collection.


The plan was to make use of a fund generously donated by former Honorary Treasurer Brian Ellis, to bring these images back out into the open, and provide some ideas for their use in the classroom as well as some context.

I worked with Peter Fox and we co-wrote the accompanying text for each image on the GA website.

The website area is now live, and there is also an article that I have written for the latest GA Magazine.

My original version of the text was a little longer than the final version, which we agreed needed to be a bit tighter to increase the instant accessibility of the resource.

For those who may want a little extra detail on the images, you can download the longer version from Slideshare here - it's over 30 pages long:

From the archive...

A name from the past on a document in Solly Street. One of several findings from my recent trip... more to come in future posts here.


Sunday, 2 October 2022

From the archive: T C Warrington to HRM in 1938

I visited the archive in Solly Street during the summer holidays and made some great discoveries.

I was able to access some letters from the personal collection of Hugh Robert Mill, received between 1893 and 1944. They were given to the GA in 2000 by Arthur Hunt, who received them from L J Jay's widow. 

L J Jay was a former GA librarian.

This letter was sent by T C Warrington to Hugh Robert Mill in 1938. Warrington was President later but at the time was Chair of the Library Committee, and the famous town planner Sir Patrick Abercrombie was President. He was requesting some information about why the RGS got involved with education... I would quite like to have seen the reply.


It's also interesting to see the header of the paper that is used, which still has Sir Halford Mackinder as the Chairman of Council, and Fleure as Honorary Secretary and Editor. This was a time just before WWII when the connections with the GA's origins were still strong.

It's also interesting to see the mention of 'Local Branches in Educational Centres throughout the Country with Affiliated Associations in N. Ireland, S. Africa, Burma, U.P, India and Ceylon'.

I perhaps need to find out more about these Affiliated Associations. There is some 'decolonising' research and work to do here.


Thursday, 22 September 2022

GA Conference 2023 Early Bird Tickets


These are now available for booking from the GA website.

Hopefully see some of you there in April 2023 for Alastair Owens' Collaborative Geographies.

Sunday, 18 September 2022

From the archive: GA Centenary Dinner, 1993

The GA Centenary Dinner was held in 1993 at Keble College, Oxford. Once again, some familiar faces.

How many can you recognise?

Saturday, 17 September 2022

GA Conference 2023 - booking now open



The 2023 Conference will be held at Sheffield Hallam University and have an updated structure from previous years.


Day one will begin at 12.00 on Thursday 13 April with a welcome from our President Alastair Owens and include your choice of a range of field visits, a place at one of our networking events, and the Conference Dinner, as well as the annual GA awards ceremony, Public Lecture and drinks reception.

Days two and three will feature the usual diverse range of lectures, workshops, Teacher-to-Teacher and research paper sessions, as well as our usual exhibition and social events.

The conference will draw to a close at 16.00 on Saturday 15 April.

We are continuing to offer a hybrid conference, with full face-to-face Conference supplemented by a slimmed-down online version streamed via our dedicated platform.

The face to face Conference at Sheffield Hallam University will include a programme of over 100 lectures, workshops, teacher-to-teacher sessions, research papers and field visits with social events in the evening and the opportunity to network with other delegates and exhibitors.

It's a highlight of the academic year.

The online version will include a combination of lectures and workshops but the programme will be smaller than the face to face version with roughly half the sessions available.


If you have put in a proposal for a session as the lead presenter you may want to delay a little to see whether it has been accepted as you will get free day's delegates fees on the day that you are presenting.

A booking portal will open shortly, but there are many hotel options in the city of Sheffield and the venue is very close to the train station.

Free registration is available to students who are members of the GA. 

Student registration does not include lunch, however there are several outlets where you can purchase food. Students who are not members of the GA should join to recieve free entry or book as a student non-member.

More details will emerge over the coming months as the programme begins to take shape. Thanks to all those who took the time to propose a lecture or workshop, or field visit.

Saturday, 10 September 2022

GA Summer Schools

While in the archive, I found a few boxes of folders of materials linked with the GA's involvement in Summer Schools.

These were held in the Summer (naturally) as an additional event at a time when the GA's main Annual conference took place over the New Year period. There were also Spring Conferences for some time.

They involved a great many of the 'great and the good' including academics and teachers. They were abandoned in the 1940s, and revived for a while in the 1950s and 1960s with many international locations for these courses which ran for 2 or 3 weeks and included travel.

Here's a description of one from 1949 in 'Geography'.

When I next head for Solly Street, my plan is to dig out the box and look at some of these events that happened in interesting locations and find out who was involved.

Source

British Geography: edited by Robert Steel (PDF download)

Thursday, 8 September 2022

1993: Centenary Badges

There was apparently a competition to design a badge for the GA's Centenary and here is the winning design from the front page of GA News at the time, in 1993.


Tuesday, 6 September 2022

Sheila Jones Legacy Fund - now available for applications

 Very pleased to see this earlier today on the GA website.




Sheila Jones was an inspirational geography teacher who had a lifetime of involvement with the Geographical Association. She was the first female teacher to be elected GA President in 1975 and her considerable service to the GA was recognised in 2007 when she was awarded Honorary Membership of the GA. She was also a member of the GA Bristol Branch and became the National Branch Officer.

The GA is very grateful to the estate of Sheila Jones for a legacy donation of £10,000 that has been received. Sheila was a great advocate of networking and therefore, this donation will be divided into 100 packages of £100 each and used to support, rejuvenate and develop networks through the GA.

The first 100 eligible network events that are received after 1 September 2022 will be able to claim a legacy package of £100 each to support their networking event.

Events supported by the Sheila Jones Legacy Fund will be asked to share a PowerPoint slide at their network event which celebrates Sheila’s contribution to the geography education community and to complete a case study that the GA will collect and collate together to share with the GA community.


I was very pleased to be able to exchange a number of emails with Sheila when I was developing my GA Presidents blog.

Thursday, 1 September 2022

2022: Professor Alastair Owens

It has been my pleasure to work with Professor Alastair Owens this last year, who has served as Vice President during my term as President

He takes over as President today!

He was very much involved in the GA Conference 2022, and has created the theme of 'Collaborative Geographies' for 2023.

More on that later in this post.

I hadn't met Alastair before he was named as the next VP, and he kindly came up to Ely in a gap in lockdown to have a wander and a chat about what the role might involve, and my own personal involvement with the Geographical Association. We have worked well together and he has been very supportive. He also had an important job to do at the GA Conference in April 2022, and introduced me at my Presidential Lecture amongst other things.

I sent Alastair the questions that I had given to all other Presidents and used them to create the post below. I'm grateful to Alastair for the lovely level of detail that he included here:

On his birth:

I was born in a cottage maternity hospital in a small town called Heswall on the Wirral, Cheshire in 1971. My father was a Church of England curate and we lived in village called Pensby; my mother had given up work as a Biology Teacher to start a family (I am the eldest of four, all born between 1971 and 1977).

On his childhood and school memories:

In 1974, aged three, I moved to a small town called Alsager, near Crewe, in south Cheshire. That was a happy time and I joined St Gabriel’s Roman Catholic Primary School for most of my primary education. It was a memorable school, newly-built and very 1970s with an open plan layout with curtained bays at the sides for ‘floor time’ activity and discussions. Mine and my siblings’ attendance caused a minor local stir as my dad was the vicar of an Anglican church and we attended a Catholic School. It was great though, as we were always given sweets on saints’ days! 

Here's Alastair in 1974 showing his fashion sense in a rather fine tank top.

He said:

I don’t have many geography memories from that time, but there was a short-lived acting career. I played Mowgli in a production of the Jungle Book in 1981 – I am the skinny one wearing a sheepskin rug) – an episode for decolonising, I think – and Michael in Mary Poppins. I think it was my ability to sing in tune that got me these roles!


At that point Alsager was being developed as a commuter town, but still felt quite rural and I enjoyed a ‘free-range’ child, pedalling around on a basic but trusty Raleigh bike (rather uncool compared to most of my friends’ ‘Choppers’), riding through fields and down disused railways with my buddies. I wanted to be a farmer (my best friend had a farm and collecting eggs from the henhouse was a favourite highlight when visiting) or a train driver, but had no inklings about becoming a Professor of Geography at the point.

On his parents and their career and family movements, plus links with politics and 1980s Britain:

My parents were quite political, my dad in particular, and in the 70s he occasionally got labelled ‘the Commie Vicar’; they were both members of CND. In fact it was politics that moved him to a new job in a place called Brinnington in Stockport, near Manchester. The move took place in 1983, just before I went to secondary school. The majority of Brinnington was comprised of a large council estate, constructed in the 1960s. It was (and remains) pretty deprived and there were many associated problems such as ill health, low educational attainment, crime and substance misuse. Of course, it was also a place of great warmth and joy, generosity, talent and care and I suppose that’s where I became very aware of the significance of place, including of the ways that certain places get pathologized and demonised.

We lived in a vicarage (one of the few detached homes in the neighbourhood) right in the middle of Brinnington, next to the church, across from a chippy and between an old people’s home and the Labour Club. This was formative. 
Many people come to visit vicarages, looking for food, shelter, money and protection. 
We were all quite adept as teenagers at handling callers, making cups of tea and sandwiches, often for regulars who you would get to know. But others visits were troubling: a night when I was in on my own, a man forced his way in to headbutt his girlfriend, who I had let in for protection; another man turned up on the doorstep with a stab wound; a trans person came exasperated by continuous taunting and discrimination; and a plastic carrier bag full of fivers and tenners was once handed in (‘don’t ask me any questions') for safe keeping.

While living in Brinnington, my father’s work became part of a politicised religious response to the ‘crisis’ of the British inner city in the 1980s. Following in the trail blazed by publications like Faith in the City (1985) and identifying with a Christian Socialist tradition, he used the church buildings to offer a range of community-centred services, from providing access to cheap food and furniture (donated from wealthier parts of Cheshire and South Manchester), to advice and counselling services, drugs advice and even a needle exchange (it was also moment of concern because of the AIDS pandemic). 
I remember this vividly and becoming a bit of an adjunct to parish life. 

One popular weekly event was prize bingo (mainly prizes of groceries bought from Sainsbury’s), and sometimes I used to have the job of placing the balls on the number tray after the caller (usually my mother) had read them out. 
This experience (living as the son of a clergyman in Brinnington not the bingo balls) became the inspiration for a major research project that I am currently completing and on the back of which I am currently writing a book (with Historian David Geiringer), exploring the response of the Church of England to the crisis of the inner city in Britain from the 1970s to the 1990s.

Alastair told me about his secondary school experiences and early interest in geography:

This life in Brinnington contrasted sharply with my schooling. 
One of the problems when moving to Brinnington was finding a place in a secondary school. It went against my parents’ principles at the time but I ended up going to a private school, Stockport Grammar School, supported by a government funded ‘assisted place’ (a scheme that funded children from low-income families to go to a private school). 

Stockport Grammar provided a wonderful education and many opportunities, offering privileges that contrasted sharply with the lives of people in Brinnington.

Through school I became increasingly interested in History and Geography, inspired by some very good teachers. 

A history teacher – Nicholas Henshall – was exceptional. He encouraged us to read academic texts and get enthused by historiographical argument and debate and instilled rigorous skills of analysis and essay writing techniques (which I use with my own students). 

The Geographers at Stockport Grammar were an eccentric and likeable bunch teaching different specialisms at A Level: the EEC with Mr Martin; Africa with Miss Backhouse; methods and techniques with Mr Barr (a north-American trained spatial scientist and product of the ‘quantitative revolution’); and physical geography with head of department, Mr Durnall (aka ‘the Colonel’), who always wore a white coat!

On his university studies, he faced some difficult decisions:

Undecided whether to study Geography or History, in the end I decided to apply for Geography courses at university. 

I got an offer from Cambridge but didn’t get my grades and wound up at my insurance choice, King’s College London

This of course has strong links with many former GA Presidents including Laurence Dudley Stamp.

I moved to London in 1990 and have been there ever since. 

King’s was exciting – buzzing, central, right at the heart of what was going on politically and economically. I persuaded them to let switch from BA Geography to BA Geography and History and made the most of a degree that allowed me to study modules across the University of London. 

At King’s I met historical Geographer David Greenat one time a key supporter of the GA and organiser of the annual conference. 

He was my tutor and dissertation supervisor and we’ve been good friends and collaborators ever since.

He’s the reason I ended up an academic Geographer, a model mentor and support, who I have learnt a great deal from. I was taught by several other inspiring geographers in London – Latin Americanist Linda Newson, Political Geographer Keith Hoggart, Cultural Geographer Peter Jackson, and Historical Geographer Richard Dennis

But London itself was as much a (historical)-geographical education as the degree course. 

I started out in student digs in Denmark Hill, before spending a year in a grotty student house in Peckham. In the final year, thanks to the early 1990s housing crisis, we lived in a cheap but (fairly) luxury flat on the Thames on the Isle of Dogs. My bedroom overlooked the river.

Alastair pictured in 1993 as a student. I had very similar glasses at the time.

Alastair moved on to telling me about his work and career to date:

I graduated in 1993 fairly convinced that I wanted to do a PhD, but failed to win funding to start straight away. Over the next year I had two jobs: working for a publishing company producing an encyclopaedia with ‘experts’ from the BBC’s Antiques Roadshow, and working as a Research Assistant for David Green at King’s on a project looking at the geography of wealth and inequality in Victorian London.

Victorian London is still a major interest and the focus of the specialist third year course I teach in my current job.

This set the scene for a PhD that I started in 1994 at what was then Queen Mary and Westfield College, over in East London. 

There I was supervised by Geographers Humphrey Southall and Miles Ogborn and undertook research on families, wealth and inheritance in the nineteenth century. 
The PhD was funded through a Teaching Assistant position in the Department of Geography at Queen Mary where I ran tutorial and seminars for undergraduate students and taught on fieldtrips. It was wonderful ‘on the job’ training and Queen Mary offered a warm and supportive working environment, with many inspiring colleagues (and friends of the GA) such as Ray Hall and Roger Lee.

Soon after starting at Queen Mary, in 1995 I moved to Hackney and have lived within a few hundred yards of the place I first rented ever since. 

Hackney is, in my view, the best place on the planet and an education in itself. 

Alastair's Twitter account is @AlastairHackney which reflects this love of the place.

From singing in a community choir to having various voluntary and community roles, I feel deeply embedded in the place. The richness and diversity of experience in Hackney is a constant geographical inspiration. It is also grounding; intellectual flights of fancy only go so far in a place as diverse, complex and unequal as Hackney; it demands a more immediate response.

I was lucky enough to get a job as soon as my PhD funding came to an end in 1998 (I hadn’t actually finished the thesis) and moved to what was then the University of Luton as a Lecturer in Human Geography. It was a small Department and there were only really two of us who taught human geography, so I quickly developed a wide-ranging teaching portfolio. Aside from the longish commute, it was for most of the time a happy institution in which to begin a career and I found Luton as a place very interesting – it felt to me like a bit of the North in the South East! With the different priorities of a ‘new’ university I got diverted from some of my core historical research interests to undertake collaborative projects with university colleagues working in the area of local healthcare provision. 

A particularly successful qualitative research project explored the palliative care needs of South Asian people living in Luton, off the back of which we published a number of articles and at that point I nearly switched my academic focus to work in health and social care services research. 
This was in part triggered by the decision to close the department I was working in (the Department of Environment, Geography and Geology) due to low student recruitment; redundancy or a lectureship in health and social care were my options. It was a painful time for many of my colleagues who had been at Luton for many years. 

In the end I took the former option as I was offered a temporary job back at Queen Mary.

Queen Mary, like Hackney is an important place for Alastair:

I returned to Queen Mary in 2001 and have been there ever since. 

In the early years – as has become the norm in HE – I got by on a number of short-term contracts filling temporary positions, but applied for and got a permanent post in Human Geography in 2005. 
Queen Mary has been a wonderful place to develop a career. Deeply rooted in its East London location, but global in its outlook and high in academic aspirations, it has often felt a privilege to be part of its diverse community. 
It has a very open intellectual culture where I have been free to work across disciplines and with people and organisations outside of the university. 
I’ve worked alongside and with many remarkable geographers at Queen Mary – Alison Blunt, Kavita Datta, Jon May, Miles Ogborn, Catherine Nash, Kate Amis, Marta Timoncini (to name just a few) – but perhaps the thing that has really made my career has been the many collaborations that I have been able to sustain outside of the university, especially with museum, heritage and community organisations. 
Centred around historical research interests spanning the period from the 1800 to the present, and often concerned with the historical geographies of London, these collaborations have included work with: Museum of London Archaeology, the Bank of England, the V&A Museum of Childhood, Spitalfields Music and many more and brought many wonderful people to work with me as PhD students. 

A particularly rewarding and long-lasting series of collaborations – usually with my colleague Alison Blunt – has been with the Museum of the Home (in Shoreditch), where, often following Alison’s discipline-leading interest in ‘geographies of home’, we have worked together to explore aspects of the domestic life and experience in the past and the present (including our current project with geographers Georgina Endfield and Kathy Burrell at the University of Liverpool on COVID-19 and experiences of domestic life).

So, what is Alastair's current role?

I was made Professor of Historical Geography at Queen Mary in 2016 and was in that role and Head of the School of Geography at Queen Mary when I became Vice President of the GA. 

I have since finished my term as Head of School, but am very pleased to be bringing an East London perspective to the GA, not least as we’ve had an active local branch of the GA supported by the Queen Mary and the East London Geography Hub (organised by Vice President elect Denise Freeman).

Alastair is also a keen runner. Here he is taking part in the 2022 Hackney Half Marathon.

What is Alastair's Presidential theme?

My theme is ‘Collaborative Geographies’. 

I chose it for a number of reasons. 

First (and rather indulgently), my own career has often been about collaboration – with my colleagues, with my students and with people and organisations outside of my university – it remains one of the most enjoyable aspects of what I do. 

Second, I think geographers are good collaborators. 
We are used to working together and can see the world from multiple perspectives. 

Collaborating is at the heart of geographical learning – in classrooms and in the field. But I also think collaboration is important as method and as a political strategy. In some political quarters there is a belief that collaboration, co-operation and working together with and across our differences is a bad thing. I profoundly disagree. There are many challenges within and beyond geography where I think collaboration – with its pleasures but also its challenges, its requirement to listen, adapt and compromise – is key to achieving better geographical education, a better professional geographical community, and a better world. 

I hope this can be explored in my presidential year and, as a framework, put to good use in relation to some of our current preoccupations and challenges, such as efforts to decolonise and make more inclusive geographical understanding, education and (professional) practice.

And finally, Alastair explained what the GA means to him:

I have long been inspired by the GA and have worked with geographical educators outside of universities since the very start of my own career as a Geographer. 
We should be working together and learning from one another, across, specialisms, areas of expertise and phases, I think. 
I began to work more with the GA after I sat on the A Level Content Advisory Board (back in 2014), where along with a team of academics, teachers and geography professionals, we devised the content for the A Level qualification that has been taught since 2016. 

My particular area of contribution related to the ‘Changing Places’ theme (loved and loathed in equal measure, I hear) - I love it - and I have contributed to various professional development programmes (associated with the GA and with organisations beyond the GA) relating to that theme ever since. 

I also co-wrote a textbook for the GA’s Top Spec series with Simon Oakes and Emma Rawlings-Smith entitled Changing Places. 

Since becoming Vice President, I have been involved in a range of other things, including the Diversity and Inclusion Group.

Best of luck to Alastair for his Presidential year ahead.

All images copyright Alastair Owens.

GA Presidency Month 12: August 2022

OK, the final month of the GA Presidency arrives, and with it comes the annual meetings and work on the moderation for the Primary and Secondary Geography Quality Marks.

I started this month during the summer holidays, enjoying the break from the classroom down in Devon. 

Topsham is a place we return to each summer. During the week I caught up with some old friends - Dan Raven Ellison and Noel Jenkins. 

With Dan, I walked one of the Slow Ways routes.

I'd previously worked with Claire Kyndt and Kate Stockings to create some ideas for geography teachers to engage with the Slow Ways project. Perhaps you have walked one of the routes this summer?

SGQM is the Secondary Geography Quality Mark. I have been involved in the moderation of this since the beginning of the award. Moderation meetings were done online this time round. I had nine  schools to moderate in the first round of moderation and then took another look at several others in the second round of moderation. There were some excellent applications this year. Those who have applied will find out the results at the start of the academic year.

I spent quite a lot of the month reading - a mixture of books for future teaching and others on topics of personal interest. I also spent quite a lot of days at home rather than out and about because of the climate change induced heat we experienced this August - which will hopefully trigger some sort of policy response amongst politicians. I won't hold my breath though.

Sheffield is where the GA's HQ is located. I haven't been up there as regularly as almost all GA Presidents due to the advent of Zoom. Previously, regular visits to Solly Street were part of the Presidential year, but this is no longer the case, which potentially broadens the range of people who may be able to apply.

I was able to get involved with some early conference planning decisions.

I also helped with the plans for some new features for the GA website - an updated version of which is coming at the end of the year all being well. There are thousands of pages on the website.

I also looked at applications to join the GA's register of consultants. This is a list of people who can be approached to potentially work on projects with you if you are business or school and need help with writing resources, or some other sort of staff development. I've completed quite a lot of consultancy work over the years on behalf of the GA.

I also wrote some text for a new GA Blog, which is going to be launched soon to help share what the Association is up to.

A GI Pedagogy meeting was also planned to take place towards the end of the month and was pushed to the very end of the month, when I started to prepare for the return to school for the start of yet another academic year. I had been due to go to Iasi in Romania this month as part of the project but that has now been postponed and we may end up going later in the year, or perhaps to another location closer to home.

I have several things already in the pipeline for the next year to fill the gap:

- mentoring a new GA Trustee as well as supporting other members of the Presidential team as Past President.

- going back to writing my Everyday Geographies book which I had made a start on before it got overtaken with other projects this year. It's taking shape quite nicely.

- I've joined the GeographySouthWest team. I had a meeting with Simon Ross and John Davidson who started the website and are now developing it a little more. I am going to be working with Emma Espley to create some resources and also 

- I will be completing my Fawcett Fellowship which I have received funding for - there are six other Fawcett Fellows and I look forward to working with them and Alex Standish over the year ahead, researching Everyday Geographies and the curriculum.

- I have some final work to do on the GI Pedagogy project.

- I also have some writing projects to complete

Best of luck to the new President for 2022-23.

Twitter stats

Later on, I shall post a biography of Professor Alastair Owens.

I will move on to a year as Past President.

Also welcome to Denise Freeman as the new Vice President of the Geographical Association - possibly the first serving female state school President I believe... we have had a few other female teacher Presidents including Pat Cleverley, Sheila Jones and Wendy Atkins (Morgan) but they were either working in Independent schools or had retired when they became President I think from my research.

It's important that we have teacher Presidents and it would be lovely for them to be more diverse than previously.

Wednesday, 31 August 2022

Coming to the end of my Presidency

It's the final day of my GA Presidency today. 

An August summary will be posted later today on the GA Presidents blog, showing the sort of things I got up to this month working in the role.

The year has gone very quickly and it has been a tremendous privilege to serve as the 106th President of the Geographical Association.

I would like to thank anyone who has done everything for the GA during the year, and who I've worked with on different events.

Particular thanks to Alan Kinder and all the team at Solly Street, particularly Isabel Richardson and Becky Kitchen who coordinated the GA Conference this year. It's a small team that very much punches above its weight.

Thanks to everyone who serves on a GA committee or special interest group or supports the work of a GA Branch. Thanks also to those on a number of working groups whose work will appear during the tenure of the next President - there are continual tweaks happening which are often hidden away until their impact can be seen.

Thanks to all involved in creating the GA's publications and journals. I've been able to contribute to three out of the four journals this year, writing a number of articles. I've written for other journals as well, and also for the GEO website.

Thanks to all those who heard me speak at events in a number of countries and online, or invited me to speak at their event - I was able to visit a wide range of locations (although not as many as I might have done before the pandemic).

Thanks to Paula Richardson for instigating and developing the support for the GA's National Fieldwork Week along with me, and some other colleagues. I hope this becomes an annual event.

Special thanks to all the team at the GA Conference 2022 which ensured that we got 'back in the room' - here they are pictured at the end of the final day when the delegates were all heading home happy. Plans are already underway for the GA Conference 2023.

Thanks also to everyone who presented at the conference and put themselves forward, and also to anyone who came along whether in person or virtually. 

It's so important for the GA's identity and for the support we offer to colleagues.

If you'd like to be part of the conference in 2023, you really need to get your proposal in within the next 24 hours or so.

Thanks to Susan Pike and Alastair Owens - the other members of the Governance Working Group - along with Olwen Lintern-Smyth and Bob Digby, plus members of the GA's Education Group.

Thanks also to the Governing Body - pictured here in June 2022 at Queen Mary University of London. Since then, we have had two people leave the group, who have been replaced by some new Governors. Thanks to Tariq Jazeel and Susan Pike who have stepped down. I have one more year, and therefore three more meetings as Past President, and then I will leave GB too.


Thanks to the geography department at King's Ely, who turned out in force to attend the conference, and are pictured below (just Kathryn missing) - we have said goodbye to Seb and Alex at the end of the year, and will be welcoming Barry (and Emma back from maternity leave) next week.


Thanks also to John Attwater, Richard Whymark and other King's Ely SLT who kindly cut me a bit of timetable slack during the year. Thanks also to all King's Ely Junior staff who covered for me in my absence.

I will be maintaining my GA Presidents Blog for the foreseeable future. 

There's plenty more to discover still about the work of the GA since 1893.

And finally thanks most of all go to my family: Sally, Ella and Sam for all their support through the year, and in the previous years that I've disappeared on GA business.

Over to you Alastair from tomorrow, when a biography will be added to the GA Presidents blog.

Saturday, 27 August 2022

From the archive: Centenary Celebrations 1993

I visited the GA Archive in Solly Street two weeks ago.

I came across some pictures from the GA's Centenary celebrations.

There were some of the Centenary dinner held at Keble College, Oxford and others of the visit by Princess Anne. 

Here's a few of the GA Council meeting in November 1993 when the centenary was celebrated, along with a special cake.



There are some familiar faces here, including the President at the time: Andrew Goudie with the cake.

If anyone spots someone in particular, please get in touch.

Tuesday, 23 August 2022

From the archive: J S Masterman in the Alps

I visited the archive in Solly Street last week and made some great discoveries.

I was able to access some letters from the personal collection of Hugh Robert Mill, received between 1893 and 1944. They were given to the GA in 2000 by Arthur Hunt, who received them from L J Jay's widow. 

L J Jay was a former GA librarian.

I came across a letter to Hugh Robert Mill from J S Masterman Esq. who was representing University College School at the first meeting of the GA in 1893.

As with several other early members, officers and Presidents of the GA, including Douglas Freshfield, they were involved with the Alpine Club.

This letter describes an ascent in the Alps. Masterman was staying in the Hotel Nesthorn in Lötschthal. This seems to have disappeared, as has the Schwarzegg Hut. This is in the area close to the Eiger and other classic peaks including the Jungfrau, which Masterman climbed. He also climbed the Finteraarhorn and the Schreckhorn - both impressive peaks with aretes and other glacial scenery. There is also description of glaciers and moraines.


The trip is not without issues, such as this problem on the way to Diablerets and Aigle.


The days before Gore Tex...

Monday, 22 August 2022

Centenary Royal patronage in 1993 - the Centenary year

In 1993, Princess Anne visited the GA's Centenary conference as a result of an invitation, which I came across when looking in the GA Archives earlier in the week. 

She was asked to be Patron of the GA's Centenary celebrations. I came across a number of original letters relating to this visit.

Here's the invitation to her, written by Simon Catling from the GA Archive - copyright with the GA as with all archive images, newspaper and journal extracts etc.

I also found the original version of the image below, which has been reproduced elsewhere.... I recognised Simon Catling on the right but not the other two gentlemen. 

It turns out that the person on the left in this image is Paul May, who was teaching at Wickersley Comprehensive School at the time. This was the school I went to (and left in 1982 to start my degree).

Here's the caption that I came across:

She is seen holding a copy of the GA's 'Teaching Geography' journal, and also a copy of W G V Balchin's Centenary volume, which has been a major source of information for many of the entries on this blog.

There was a report on the visit in the GA News. I came across a complete bound copy of all early issues of GA News.


Princess Anne spoke for 25 minutes, and pointed out the value of Geography in several different ways. 

Source:

Boardman, David, and Michael McPartland. “A Hundred Years of Geography Teaching Towards Centralisation: 1983—1993.” Teaching Geography, vol. 18, no. 4, 1993, pp. 159–63. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/23754550. Accessed 19 Aug. 2022.

Sunday, 21 August 2022

British Geography: 1918-1945

This book was edited by Robert Steel, who was GA President in 1973.


There are several chapters written by former GA Presidents, such as K C Edwards.

Click here to access a PDF of the book.

There is quite a bit here about the idea of regions: something tied to the work of Herbertson, Fleure and R J Unstead.

This includes terms such as 'stows' and 'tracts'.

The GA also had a committee on regions for a while. There is mention in this part of the book of Leonard Brooks, who also later became a GA President (and about whom I know relatively little), and also mentions the work of Eva Taylor, who I need to investigate in more detail I think.

Saturday, 20 August 2022

From the archive: Lord Meston's Address in 1934

I visited the GA Archives in Solly Street earlier this week and made some good discoveries.

One of the things I discovered was from Lord James Scorgie Meston, who was President in 1934.

Lord Meston's Address to a GA group in Glasgow was published in the Scottish Educational Journal in 1934.


Here is the address, in two pages.


There are a few interesting sections - this one shows how what might be seen as powerful knowledge dates...


What was the question of Memel? 

I had to look it up and discovered a link with the League of Nations - another institution that the GA has close links with.

Professor Eva G R Taylor

Updated August 2023

Eva Taylor was the first woman to hold a Chair in Geography in the UK: at Birkbeck.


Eva G R Taylor worked with R J Unstead on work on regions and within the Birkbeck Geography department.

She was a ground-breaking female geographer and historian.

Regional geography was a key idea in geography for many decades, even through to the 1980s when I started my teaching career.


Source:

British Geography, edited by Robert Steel. (PDF download)

PROFESSOR Eva G. R. Taylor, an Honorary Member of the Institute since 1954, died in Wokingham on 5 July 1966, aged 85. She was a Fellow of Birkbeck College and Victoria Medallist of the Royal Geographical Society. From 1930 to 1934 she was Professor and Head of the Department of Geography in the University of London, and in 1944 became Professor Emeritus.

There are links here to a range of former GA Presidents and also A J Herbertson.

Image source:

https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/2F941C5513B80DB4D1C8F4BCEF0F6B57/S0373463300042946a.pdf/div-class-title-eva-g-r-taylor-div.pdf

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eva_Germaine_Rimington_Taylor

According to this, the first woman to hold an academic chair of geography in the United Kingdom.

From the document above:

In a broadcast talk about town-planning, Professor Taylor once said that to plan a new town on the lines she was criticizing was like 'trying to stop Tommy growing by refusing to buy him a new pair of boots'. It was typical of her forthright use of English. 

Many people know and respect her as a geographer and historian, but to many she is endeared by her absolute mastery of language: no stylist in the prissy sense of the word, but a writer in whom two great literary virtues were eminently found. First, the absolute reflection of the writer in the words—so that her tone and personality come through so unmistakably that no other person could have written them. And secondly, so complete a certainty of what she had to say that the language she used took on a natural, unforced, direct form that gave it immense pungency and punch. 

That clarity of mind extended not simply to the construction of each sentence but to the whole plan of the essay or book—an essentially classical virtue even more admirable when found in a person who had a poor opinion of the exclusively classical—to put it in terms that are probably historically out of date and that would (God rest her) perhaps infuriate her, an Oxford rather than a Cambridge virtue. As a historian, Professor Taylor was constantly dealing with movements, inventions, discoveries, manifesting themselves in persons: and no matter which of her writings you turn to, you will find (and this is what gives her writing such ease and clarity) that she never wrote until she had a clear picture of the personality behind the person. There are no lay figures in her work. It is supreme craftsmanship, even supreme artistry. 

RENE HAGU

Updated August 2023

Obituary in Transactions of the IBG

“Eva Germaine Rimington Taylor.” Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, no. 45, 1968, pp. 181–86. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/621401. Accessed 24 Aug. 2023.


She was the President of Section E

She started out as a Chemistry Teacher

In 1905, while attending a vacation course in education at Oxford, she was introduced to geographical field studies. Early in 1906, she moved to a teaching post at a convent school in Oxford in order to complete her study for the Diploma in Education. In October of the same year, she became a student at the School of Geography and two years later obtained the Certificate of Regional Geography and the Diploma of Geography, both with a mark of distinction. 

From 1908 to 1910, she served as a private research assistant to A. J. Herbertson who 'considered her the most brilliant and able of the many women students trained under him at Oxford' (H. O. Beckit, in a testimonial dated 27 April 1916). 

She spent the years 1910 to 1916 writing school text-books and drafting wall-maps (in collaboration with J. F. Unstead whom she first met at Oxford in 1906); and in starting her family. From 1916 to 1918, she lectured in geography and in educational method at Clapham Training College for Teachers and at the Froebel Educational Institute. In 1920, she gave a course of lectures at Queen Mary College (then the East London College).

Also published in 'The Geographical Teacher' - 1916

Taylor, E. G. R. “THE FIRST STEPS IN GEOGRAPHY TEACHING.” The Geographical Teacher, vol. 8, no. 4, 1916, pp. 224–30. JSTOR, http://www.jstor.org/stable/40554496. Accessed 24 Aug. 2023.

Worth a read.

Source:

Beaver, S. H. “Geography in the British Association for the Advancement of Science.” The Geographical Journal, vol. 148, no. 2, 1982, pp. 173–81. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/633769. Accessed 24 Aug. 2023.

Eva Taylor lectures were started in 1960.
The one described here was chaired by another former GA President: Michael Wise.
Of the speaker here he described his work during the war...


Wise, M. J., et al. “Planning and Geography in the Last Three Decades: Discussion.” The Geographical Journal, vol. 137, no. 3, 1971, pp. 330–38. JSTOR, https://doi.org/10.2307/1797270. Accessed 24 Aug. 2023.

Further memories of Eva Taylor are very much welcome.

"Professor Eva Taylor of Birkbeck College London University, the foremost authority on Tudor geography, arranged a facsimile publication and provided commentary on Forty Plates from John Speed’s Pocket Atlas of 1627.

Professor Emeritus Taylor, 1879–1966, was the first female professor of geography in the U.K., published prolifically, and was also renowned for her unconventional use of a walking stick: 

An academia.edu bio describes how “she used to point it at students when asking a question, as well as using it to hail taxies or even to hook Professor Darby’s leg to join her taxi from a crowd of people waiting.”

“Her writings were characterized by the extensive use of original sources and documentary evidence and they were always a delight to read.” This included “her two monumental volumes of the mathematical practitioners of Tudor and Stuart England (1954), and then those of Hanoverian England (1966)….”

Source: https://simanaitissays.com/2022/03/15/touring-tudor-england-with-professor-eva-taylor-and-google-maps/


And another biography here:

Taylor continued working well into her 80s, dying at Wokingham on July 5, 1966.

https://www.encyclopedia.com/women/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/taylor-eva-1879-1966

https://www.hakluyt.com/downloadable_files/Journal/DeClercqTaylor.pdf - an updated version of a lecture given in 2005. Mentions Bill Mead.

She was a partner of one of the Dunhills of tobacco fame it seems.

A Bill Mead mention of her lecturing at the GA Conference here (in 1946 just after WWII)




Another Eva Taylor lecture transcript:

R H Kinvig

R H Kinvig is mentioned in a few documents referenced when I was searching for information on Michael Wise. He was connected with the Unive...