Climate Education

Compact Fluorescent and LED Cost-Benefit Analysis

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In this activity, students collect data and analyze the cost of using energy in their homes and investigate one method of reducing energy use. This activity provides educators and students with the means to connect 'energy use consequences' and 'climate change causes.' Through examining home energy use and calculating both pollution caused by the generation of electricity and potential savings, students can internalize these issues and share information with their families.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Author: Connecticut Energy Education

Comparison of the Effects of Increased CO2 in the Air to Seawater and Distilled Water

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This well-designed experiment compares CO2 impacts on salt water and fresh water. In a short demonstration, students examine how distilled water (i.e., pure water without any dissolved ions or compounds) and seawater are affected differently by increasing carbon dioxide in the air.

Material Type: Activity/Lab, Simulation

Authors: Annika Sabrowski, CarboSchools.org, Patrick Silva, S. Soria-Dengg

Cool Cores Capture Climate Change

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This Earth Exploration Toolbook chapter is a detailed computer-based exploration in which students learn how various climatic conditions impact the formations of sediment layers on the ocean floor. They analyze sediment core data from the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica for evidence of climate changes over time. In addition, they interact with various tools and animations throughout the activity, in particular the Paleontological Stratigraphic Interval Construction and Analysis Tool (PSICAT) that is used to construct a climate change model of a sediment core from core images.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Earth Exploration Toolbook/TERC, Jean Pennycook

Coral Bleaching: A White Hot Problem

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This teaching activity addresses environmental stresses on corals. Students assess coral bleaching using water temperature data from the NOAA National Data Buoy Center. Students learn about the habitat of corals, the stresses on coral populations, and the impact of increased sea surface temperatures on coral reefs. In a discussion section, the connection between coral bleaching and global warming is drawn.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Bridge Project - NOAA Sea Grant and National Marine Educators Association, Laura Rose, Lisa Ayers Lawrence

Dendrochronology - Trees: Recorders of Climate Change

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In this activity, students are introduced to tree rings by examining a cross section of a tree, also known as a 'tree cookie.' They discover how tree age can be determined by studying the rings and how ring thickness can be used to deduce times of optimal growing conditions. Next, they investigate simulated tree rings applying the scientific method to explore how climatic conditions varied over time.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Author: NCAR - National Center for Atmospheric Research

Detecting El Niño in Sea Surface Temperature Data

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This multi-part activity introduces users to normal seasonal sea surface temperature (SST) variation as well as extreme variation, as in the case of El Niño and La Niña events, in the equatorial Pacific Ocean. Via a THREDDS server, users learn how to download seasonal SST data for the years 1982 to 1998. Using a geographic information system (GIS), they visualize and analyze that data, looking for the tell-tale SST signature of El Niño and La Niña events that occurred during that time period. At the end, students analyze a season of their own choosing to determine if an El Niño or La Niña SST pattern emerged in that year's data.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Betsy Youngman, David Smith, Earth Exploration Toolbook Chapter from TERC

Differences Between Climate and Weather

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In this activity, students collect weather data over several days or weeks, graph temperature data, and compare the temperature data collected with long-term climate averages from where they live. Understanding the difference between weather and climate and interpreting local weather data are important first steps to understanding larger-scale global climate changes.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Author: National Center for Atmospheric Research

Dinosaur Breath - Learning about the Carbon Cycle

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This activity illustrates the carbon cycle using an age-appropriate hook, and it includes thorough discussion and hands-on experimentation. Students learn about the geological (ancient) carbon cycle; they investigate the role of dinosaurs in the carbon cycle, and the eventual storage of carbon in the form of chalk. Students discover how the carbon cycle has been occurring for millions of years and is necessary for life on Earth. Finally, they may extend their knowledge to the concept of global warming and how engineers are working to understand the carbon cycle and reduce harmful carbon dioxide emissions.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Janet Yowell, Lauren Cooper, Malinda Schaefer Zarske, TeachEngineering - Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, CU Boulder

Earth System: Ice and Global Warming

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In this video, students learn that scientific evidence strongly suggests that different regions on Earth do not respond equally to increased temperatures. Ice-covered regions appear to be particularly sensitive to even small changes in global temperature. This video segment adapted from NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center details how global warming may already be responsible for a significant reduction in glacial ice, which may in turn have significant consequences for the planet.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Author: WGBH/Boston

Earth as a System

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This short video uses animated imagery from satellite remote sensing systems to illustrate that Earth is a complex, evolving body characterized by ceaseless change. Adapted from NASA, this visualization helps explain why understanding Earth as an integrated system of components and processes is essential to science education.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Author: WGBH/Boston

The Earth's Heat Budget

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Hands-on laboratory activity that allows students to investigate the effects of distance and angle on the input of solar radiation at Earth's surface, the role played by albedo, the heat capacity of land and water, and how these cause the seasons. Students predict radiative heating based on simple geometry and experiment to test their hypotheses.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: National Association of Geoscience Teachers, Roy Plotnick