Geographic understanding is a critical component of higher education that enables students to interpret complex social and environmental issues through spatial reasoning and contextual analysis. While geography is often treated as a descriptive subject, its role in developing interpretative and analytical abilities among students remains insufficiently examined in structured academic discussions. This study addresses this gap by analyzing how geographic understanding contributes to students’ ability to interpret real-world socio-environmental challenges within higher education settings. The study adopts a qualitative review-based approach using secondary sources, including academic literature, policy documents, and pedagogical frameworks. A thematic analysis is employed to examine key dimensions such as spatial awareness, map-based learning, human–environment interaction, and contextual interpretation. The focus on higher education is intentional, as this stage represents a transition from foundational knowledge to analytical and application-oriented learning, where students are expected to engage with complex, real-world issues. The analysis demonstrates that students with stronger geographic understanding exhibit improved ability to interpret patterns of resource distribution, environmental change, and socio-spatial inequalities. Concept-based teaching methods, when combined with applied learning strategies, enhance not only conceptual clarity but also critical interpretation. The study concludes that integrating geographic understanding within higher education curricula strengthens students’ analytical capacity and supports informed engagement with contemporary social and environmental challenges.
Priya et al. (Sun,) studied this question.