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Sustainable Urban Development Strategies
Geography · JC 1 · Sustainable Development - Urban Environments · 4.º Período

Sustainable Urban Development Strategies

Students assess various strategies aimed at achieving sustainable urban development, including green infrastructure and waste management. They consider the role of governance and community participation.

TL;DR:Urban social issues and housing focus on the 'human' side of the city, examining the challenges of social segregation, the persistence of informal settlements, and the quest for affordable housing. Students investigate how the physical design of a city can either foster social cohesion or exacerbate divisions. This topic requires a sensitive and nuanced look at how different groups, based on income, ethnicity, or migrant status, experience the city differently.

MOE Syllabus OutcomesH2 Geography Syllabus 9751, Theme 3.1.5H2 Geography Syllabus 9751, Theme 3.1.6

About This Topic

Urban social issues and housing focus on the 'human' side of the city, examining the challenges of social segregation, the persistence of informal settlements, and the quest for affordable housing. Students investigate how the physical design of a city can either foster social cohesion or exacerbate divisions. This topic requires a sensitive and nuanced look at how different groups, based on income, ethnicity, or migrant status, experience the city differently.

In Singapore, our public housing (HDB) system is a central pillar of our social fabric, designed not just for shelter but for nation-building and racial harmony. Students analyze our 'Ethnic Integration Policy' and 'resident committees' as tools for social engineering. This topic comes alive when students can engage in role-plays or 'empathy mapping' to understand the lived experiences of diverse urban residents, from the elderly in mature estates to migrant workers in dormitories.

Key Questions

  1. What makes an urban development strategy sustainable?
  2. How can cities manage waste and resources more effectively?
  3. What is the role of urban governance in achieving sustainability?

Watch Out for These Misconceptions

Common MisconceptionSlums are just places of poverty and crime.

What to Teach Instead

Many informal settlements are vibrant hubs of entrepreneurship and strong social support networks. Using a 'strengths-based' analysis of a slum case study helps students see these communities as complex social systems rather than just 'problems' to be cleared.

Common MisconceptionProviding 'enough' houses is the same as solving the housing crisis.

What to Teach Instead

Housing must also be affordable, accessible to jobs, and socially inclusive. Peer-led discussions on 'what makes a house a home' can help students distinguish between the 'quantity' and 'quality' of urban housing solutions.

Active Learning Ideas

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is 'Gentrification' and why is it controversial?
It's the process where a poor urban area is changed by wealthier people moving in, improving housing but often displacing the original residents. A collaborative mapping task identifying 'gentrifying' neighborhoods in global cities can help students understand the social tension it creates.
How does Singapore's HDB system promote social harmony?
Through the Ethnic Integration Policy (EIP), which ensures a balanced mix of races in every block, and the design of common spaces that encourage interaction. Discussing the EIP in the context of 'social engineering' helps students understand the deliberate nature of Singapore's social planning.
How does active learning help students understand urban social issues?
Social issues are often about perspective and empathy. Active learning strategies like role-playing or 'empathy mapping' allow students to step outside their own experience and understand the systemic barriers faced by different urban groups, leading to a more compassionate and nuanced geographical analysis.
What is 'Social Segregation' in an urban context?
It's the physical separation of different social groups into different neighborhoods. This can be based on income, race, or religion. Using a 'segregation index' activity where students analyze city maps can help them visualize how 'invisible walls' are built into the urban fabric.

Planning templates for Geography

Edited by Adriana Perusin, Editor-in-Chief, Flip Education