Teaching about and through Landscape

Vincent van Gogh - Landscape from Saint-Rémy - Google Art Project
Teaching about and through Landscape

Landscapes surround us constantly—through the classroom window, in travel photos, in cityscapes and nature reserves. Yet what do your students see when they look at the world around them?

We tend to think of landscapes as something static—a view, a background, a setting. But what if we considered them instead as living texts? As emotional, historical, and political spaces that shape the way we experience the world?

A landscape is not just a backdrop to our lives—it influences how we perceive history, how we build identity, and how we relate to nature and each other. It is never neutral—it carries emotion, memory, ownership—and often, conflict.

In this lesson, we offer a quiz, articles, a video, and a glossary. These teaching resources are designed to help you confidently introduce the topic of landscape in your history, geography, or civic education lessons. They provide engaging and ready-to-use materials that make it easy to explore landscapes from multiple perspectives – visual, cultural, and social – with your students.


Quiz

In this quiz, you’ll get the chance to think about landscapes in a new way. It’s not just about nature or scenery, but also about the stories, history, and people connected to a place. As you go through the questions, you’ll discover how landscapes are shaped by human choices, how they reflect memory and identity, and why they matter in everyday life. The goal is to make you curious and help you look at familiar places with fresh eyes.

💡 There are no right or wrong answers here – the goal is to encourage broad and reflective ways of seeing and understanding landscapes.


Video

Expert voice on Landscape

Together with Dr. Mateusz Salwa—philosopher, environmental aesthetics scholar, and author of The Landscape. An Aesthetic Phenomenon—explore how landscapes speak to us, influence our perceptions, and become contested spaces of identity, power, and memory.