The Carbon Cycle: How to teach a 2016 specification in 2026 (Pearson Edexcel A Level Geography)
The Carbon Cycle: How to teach a 2016 specification in 2026 (Pearson Edexcel A Level Geography)
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The 2016 spec is officially a decade old. If your carbon case studies need refreshing, your students—who have grown up in a permanent climate emergency—will check out. To make this stick, you need to move beyond dry diagrams and hit them with the high-stakes reality of 2026.
This expert-led webinar is about bridging the gap between the mark scheme and the world outside the classroom window. Paul Logue is back to help you turn "stores and fluxes" into a narrative that actually lands. We are talking about the difference between reading a textbook and understanding the planet.
- The Scale of the Problem: We look at how human-led emissions—now roughly 37Gt annually—dwarf natural volcanic outgassing.
- Modern Energy Geopolitics: Moving past basic renewables to the real-world drama of energy pathway disruptions
- Exam Impact: Practical ways to use fresh data and "edu-speak" to help students hit those 12- and 20-mark AO2 requirements without just reciting the book.
Register for the webinar today! Catch the recording for six months or join us live for an extra three months of access - that's up to nine months of lesson-boosting insights!
Webinar fee: £69.00 + £0.75 booking fee
About our expert trainer
Paul Logue is the Head of Geography and a Teaching and Learning Leader at St Dominic's Sixth Form College. He is also the Chair of the Post-16 and Higher Education Phase Committee for the Geographical Association and a winner of the Royal Geographical Society's Ordnance Survey Award. He is an experienced educator, staff governor and leader with a passion for innovative teaching and learning strategies. Paul is the founder of @GeogChat, a social media group for teachers to share their love of geography.
Booking Information
One login per teacher for the live session, but the recording is there for your whole department. We will email an invoice the next business day, and payment is due via bank transfer within 14 days. Remember to include your PO number so your finance office doesn't have to chase you.