All resources in Environmental Literacy and Sustainability

Using Data to Identify Hot Spots and Predict Bleaching Events

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In this EarthLabs activity, learners explore the concepts of coral bleaching, bleaching hot spots and degree-heating weeks. Using data products from NOAA's Coral Reef Watch, students identify bleaching hot spots and degree-heating weeks around the globe as well as in the Florida Keys' Sombrero Reef to determine the impact higher-than-normal sea surface temperatures have on coral reefs.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Erin Bardar, LuAnn Dahlman, TERC, EarthLabs Project

Using GLOBE Data to Study the Earth System

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In this activity, students are guided through the process of locating and graphing web-based environmental data that has been collected by GLOBE Program participants using actual data collected by students in Pennsylvania and comparing them to their local climatic boundary conditions. This activity highlights the opportunities for using GLOBE data to introduce basic concepts of Earth system science.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Nick Haddad, Tamara Shapiro Ledley

Using NASA NEO and ImageJ to Explore the Role of Snow Cover in Shaping Climate

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In this activity students download satellite images displaying land surface temperature, snow cover, and reflected short wave radiation data from the NASA Earth Observation (NEO) Web site. They then explore and animate these images using the free tool ImageJ and utilize the Web-based analysis tools built into NEO to observe, graph, and analyze the relationships among these three variables.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: B. Youngman, C. McAuliffe, D. Herring, Earth Exploration Toolbook Chapter from TERC, H. Riebeek, J. Lockwood, K. Ward, R. Freuder

Using Satellite Images to Understand Earth's Atmosphere

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In this Earth Exploration Toolbook chapter, students select, explore, and analyze satellite imagery. They do so in the context of a case study of the origins of atmospheric carbon monoxide and aerosols, tiny solid airborne particles such as smoke from forest fires and dust from desert wind storms. They use the software tool ImageJ to animate a year of monthly images of aerosol data and then compare the animation to one created for monthly images of carbon monoxide data. Students select, explore, and analyze satellite imagery using NASA Earth Observatory (NEO) satellite data and NEO Image Composite Explorer (ICE) tool to investigate seasonal and geographic patterns and variations in concentration of CO and aerosols in the atmosphere.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Earth Exploration Toolbook, TERC, et. al., Todd Ensign

Using a mass balance model to understand carbon dioxide and its connection to global warming

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Students explore the increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide over the past 40 years with an interactive online model. They use the model and observations to estimate present emission rates and emission growth rates. The model is then used to estimate future levels of carbon dioxide using different future emission scenarios. These different scenarios are then linked by students to climate model predictions also used by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Robert MacKay, SERC - Teaching Quantitative Skills in Geoscience Collection

Using the Very, Very Simple Climate Model in the Classroom

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This is a teaching activity in which students learn about the connection between CO2 emissions, CO2 concentration, and average global temperatures. Through a simple online model, students learn about the relationship between these and learn about climate modeling while predicting temperature change over the 21st century.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Lisa Gardiner, Randy Russell, Windows to the Universe

Vostok Ice Core: Excel (Mac or PC)

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This activity with a lab report instructs students to solve and plot 160,000 years' worth of ice core data from the Vostok ice core using Excel or similar spreadsheets to analyze data. Students learn about ice cores and what they can tell us about past atmospheric conditions and the past atmospheric concentrations of CO2 and CH4.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Starting Point Collection, Science Education Resource Center (SERC) at Carleton College, Stephanie Pfirman

What are the causes and effects of ENSO?

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This activity addresses naturally occurring climate change involving ENSO (El-NiÃo Southern Oscillation). In this activity, students play the role of a policy maker in Peru. First, they determine what sort of ENSO variation is occurring. Then, they must decide how to allocate Peru's resources to manage for possible weather-related problems.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: From the On The Cutting Edge activity collection, Sarah Bednarz, Texas AM University

What if the Ice Shelves Melted?

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This activity is a hands-on guided inquiry activity designed to highlight the role of an ice shelf on slowing the movement of continental ice sheets in Antarctica. Students build a model of Antarctica and both continental glaciers and ice shelves using paper models of the land and slime for glaciers and ice. Students use their model to explore the impact of recent and potential ice shelf melting and break-up.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: ANDRILL, LuAnn Dahlman

Who Will Take the Heat?

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This activity engages students in a role play to negotiate an agreement between the United States and China about climate change policies. Students use given background material or can do their own additional research to present their assigned stakeholder's position in a simulated negotiation.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: NOVA, PBS Teachers

Wind Power Basics

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This activity introduces wind energy concepts through a reading passage and by answering assessment questions. The main section of the activity involves constructing and testing a windmill to observe how design and position affect the electrical energy produced.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Author: Infinite Power of Texas

World Climate: Climate Change Negotiations Game

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This simulation provides scenarios for exploring the principles of climate dynamics from a multi-disciplinary perspective. Interconnections among climate issues, public stakeholders, and the governance spheres are investigated through creative simulations designed to help students understand international climate change negotiations.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: (Copyrighted by Climate Interactive, creators of the Climate Scoreboard, C-ROADS, Climate Bathtub and other interactive tools to enable thinking in systems), John Sterman, Tom Fiddaman

Zero-Energy Housing

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Students investigate passive solar building design with a focus on heating. Insulation, window placement, thermal mass, surface colors, and site orientation are addressed in the background materials and design preparation. Students test their projects for thermal gains and losses during a simulated day and night then compare designs with other teams for suggestions for improvements.

Material Type: Activity/Lab

Authors: Denise W. Carlson, Jonathan MacNeil, Malinda Schaefer Zarske, TeachEngineering by the Integrated Teaching and Learning Program