SYNOPSIS: In this lesson, students research nuclear energy and advocate for its …
SYNOPSIS: In this lesson, students research nuclear energy and advocate for its expansion or contraction in order to meet the goals of the Paris Agreement. Students form policy proposals and compromise on the best path forward.
SCIENTIST NOTES: This lesson enables students to understand the advantages and disadvantages of nuclear energy, particularly the fission process. They would also analyze the best energy plans and develop policy proposals that would achieve the Paris goal and address climate change. All activities and materials have been fact-checked, and this lesson is recommended for teaching.
POSITIVES: -Students explore a topic that is relevant but may not be part of their daily routine. -Students collaborate in research and discussion. -Students have the opportunity to choose what to research. -Students have the opportunity to discuss opposing arguments in a civil and productive way. Students must listen to one another to compromise on an energy policy. -This lesson provides a grading rubric.
ADDITIONAL PREREQUISITES: -Students can design local, national, or global policy proposals. -Allow students to discuss freely and independently; offer guidance only when students appear off track or stuck. -Make sure everyone has an opportunity to contribute to each group conversation. -It may be necessary to coach your students on how to be a respectful listener. This includes making eye contact and refraining from looking at screens. -This lesson can be split into multiple sessions or days. Parts of this lesson can also be assigned to be completed outside of regular class time.
DIFFERENTIATION: -The extent of student research and detail in policy planning can be adjusted to student skill level. -If your class has 24 students, you may have eight groups of students. Four of the groups would advocate for expanding nuclear energy capacity, and four of the groups would advocate for reducing nuclear energy capacity. -It may be necessary to ask some students to take opposing viewpoints in order to have a balanced class. For example, if 19 of your 24 students want to expand nuclear energy capacity, some of them will have to switch sides in order to create more balance. It may be helpful to emphasize the fact that people with strong debating skills can argue both sides of any argument.
Ce livre est issu des travaux d'un séminaire de 2e et 3e …
Ce livre est issu des travaux d'un séminaire de 2e et 3e cycles en communication publique de la Faculté de l'Université Laval. Il n'est pas tout à fait terminé, merci de votre compréhension.
SYNOPSIS: This lesson introduces students to the effects of climate change on …
SYNOPSIS: This lesson introduces students to the effects of climate change on animals and their habitats.
SCIENTIST NOTES: This lesson allows students to understand what habitat means and how organisms interact within their range. Students would also be able to classify animals into different habitats, explore the impact of climate change on biodiversity in different ecosystems, and proffer ways to reduce these impacts. All the accompanying materials in the lesson are well-sourced, and this lesson has passed our science credibility review.
POSITIVES: -This lesson opens up a conversation to discuss climate change through the topics of animals, which younger students can understand. -This lesson allows students to practice using their agency and voice to make a change in their world. -This lesson could be extended into a larger research project on specific animals and their habitats.
ADDITIONAL PREREQUISITES: -Students may need to review the vocabulary term habitat. -Students may benefit from a cause and effect lesson prior to this lesson. -A lesson on observational drawings and analyzing photography could be beneficial for some learners.
DIFFERENTIATION: -The observation and chart assignments are naturally differentiated due to the inclusion of drawings and/or words. Students can draw or write depending on their level. -Vocabulary word cards could be used for students who need assistance with vocabulary comprehension. -Student groups/partners could be picked based on ability level or mixed ability level depending on the purpose of instruction. -Students could complete the drawings or letters in a digital format as well. -These articles could be utilized to expand the non-fiction article reading component for students who are able: -How Does Climate Change Affect the Ocean? -Learning about Climate from Oceans
This edited volume is organized as a dialogue on the theme of …
This edited volume is organized as a dialogue on the theme of global citizenship. In response to a lead essay by Canadian political theorist James Tully, seven subsequent chapters offer responses to Tully’s framing of global citizenship. The ninth and final chapter offers a closing response from Tully.
SYNOPSIS: In this lesson, students explore increased precipitation and sea level rise …
SYNOPSIS: In this lesson, students explore increased precipitation and sea level rise in New Jersey and advocate for a climate adaptation strategy.
SCIENTIST NOTES: In this lesson, students will learn the basics of sea level rise and extreme rainfall and how that specifically is impacting New Jersey. They will also be introduced to a variety of ideas and technology to combat the increased flooding due to these things. Finally, they will be inspired to take action and propose an idea that will benefit their local community. All the videos have been reviewed for accuracy. The two mapping tools also explain where they are getting their data from. This resource is recommended for teaching.
POSITIVES: -This lesson can be used in English, social studies, or science classes. -Students are given voice and choice in this lesson. -Students become agents of change in their own communities.
ADDITIONAL PREREQUISITES: -Students should be familiar with the basics of climate change and sea level rise. -Students will be advocating for climate adaptation strategies. Climate adaptation strategies are ways humans are adapting to a changing climate. This is different from climate mitigation, which are ways humans are slowing down climate change. Climate mitigation strategies include reducing fossil fuel use and ending deforestation. -The first two videos in the Investigate section will autoplay only the segment of the video that pertains to this lesson. -How Climate Change Has Intensified Hurricane Season will play from 02:59-03:36. -Thermal Expansion & Sea Level Rise will play from 01:27-02:54. -The Investigate section features six different resources. These resources (four videos, one map, and one podcast) should not take that much time individually.
DIFFERENTIATION: -Students' communication can be as simple or as thorough as you desire. They will need more time to research and craft their communication if you want their writing to be more fact-based and robust. -Some students may wish to communicate their advocacy via social media. Make sure to follow all school rules and monitor students' progress if you allow this in the classroom. -Allow students to pursue other methods of communication, adaptation strategies, and recipients not listed in the chart in the Inspire section. -In certain situations, it may be best to allow students to teach their family and friends about increased precipitation and sea level rise. This could be used as a replacement activity instead of student communication to government and business leaders.
The “Own It!”Handbook for Ages 11-16 is the guide book for a …
The “Own It!”Handbook for Ages 11-16 is the guide book for a transformative after-school, trauma-informed enrichment program. It provides a series of lessons & activities that nurture academic skills, personal growth and leadership. It uses history to connect our past to our future, as part of the Own Your History® (OYH) Collection.Our inheritances from family history and from living in the United States provide the starting point for our personal journeys. Our individual stories are part of a complex American history. We each can choose consciously to write our life story and work for a greater future. But Own It! is not “school” and it differs from traditional approaches to history. Own It! helps students learn more about themselves, as well as their community and the country. Own It! enhances students’ engagement in being creative, making things happen, and achieving goals. Its mission is to help them step up and enrich their lives, especially by understanding that they live in history.
History is a challenging subject to impart to students, especially 7 and …
History is a challenging subject to impart to students, especially 7 and 8 year olds. As with all subjects, showing a connection to their daily lives ensures its relevance and an enduring understanding. Students have some sense of their basic rights, but they do not know how these rights came to be and how they differ for noncitizens and those outside the United States.
The aim of this unit is to teach students how our constitutional rights evolved and why they are salient today. It’s divided into sections to ensure this complex topic can be presented at an elementary level. It will provide the students with an overview of the Constitution of the United States with a focus on the rights and privileges of citizens that will be most intuitive to children (1 st , 13 th , 14 th ,15 th , and 19 th ). Activities include producing a narrative writing, a research booklet, a dialogical notebook, and a take-action choice piece with an eye to promoting critical thinking about historical change. Upon completion, students will have a better understanding of their rights and responsibilities as citizens, and how they can contribute to the betterment of this country.
In this project, you will explore a real-world problem, and then work …
In this project, you will explore a real-world problem, and then work through a series of steps to analyze that problem, research ways the problem could be solved, then propose a possible solution to that problem. Often, there are no specific right or wrong solutions, but sometimes one particular solution may be better than others. The key is making sure you fully understand the problem, have researched some possible solutions, and have proposed the solution that you can support with information / evidence.Begin by reading the problem statement in Step 1. Take the time to review all the information provided in the statement, including exploring the websites, videos and / or articles that are linked. Then work on steps 2 through 8 to complete this problem-based learning experience.
This seminar looks at key issues in the historical development and current …
This seminar looks at key issues in the historical development and current state of modern American criminal justice, with an emphasis on its relationship to citizenship, nationhood, and race/ethnicity. We begin with a range of perspectives on the rise of what is often called “mass incarceration”: how did our current system of criminal punishment take shape, and what role did race play in that process? Part Two takes up a series of case studies, including racial disparities in the administration of the death penalty, enforcement of the drug laws, and the regulation of police investigations. The third and final part of the seminar looks at national security policing: the development of a constitutional law governing the intersection of ethnicity, religion, and counter-terrorism, and the impact of counter-terrorism policy on domestic police practices.
This course provides an introduction to the issues of immigrants, planning, and …
This course provides an introduction to the issues of immigrants, planning, and race. It identifies the complexities and identities of immigrant populations emerging in the United States context and how different community groups negotiate that complexity. It explores the critical differences and commonalities between immigrant and non-immigrant communities, as well as how the planning profession does and should respond to those differences. Finally, the course explores the intersection of immigrant communities’ formation and their interactions with African Americans and the idea of race in the United States.
This lesson covers four important lawsuits brought by Asian Americans with important …
This lesson covers four important lawsuits brought by Asian Americans with important consequences for American citizenship, equal protection, and racial identity: Yick Wo, Wong Kim Ark, Takao Ozawa, Bhagat Singh Thind.
SYNOPSIS: This lesson introduces the idea of reduce, reuse, recycle and has …
SYNOPSIS: This lesson introduces the idea of reduce, reuse, recycle and has students create a classroom waste management plan.
SCIENTIST NOTES: This lesson introduces students to the sustainable waste management principles of reduce, reuse, and recycle. They would be engaged in sorting waste and disposing of it into appropriate recycling bins. They would also be able to explain the implications of waste recycling on the environment. All materials are thoroughly sourced and written. Accordingly, this lesson has passed our science review.
POSITIVES: -Students participate in a hands-on and physically active learning activity. -Students collaborate and develop long-term plans together. -Students get a sense of ownership from developing a classroom waste management plan.
ADDITIONAL PREREQUISITES: -Teacher needs to either: -Bring in materials to sort for The Great Reduce Reuse Recycle Relay. -Print the alternate materials in advance. -Some sort of large poster needs to be available to hang in an easily viewed space for students to have easy access to the classroom waste management plan.
DIFFERENTIATION: -Students could work in groups to complete the cut and sort in the Investigate stage if time is limited. -Students with physical limitations may do The Great Reduce Reuse Recycle Relay at their desk with the alternate materials or be the “bin monitor” to help ensure each relay team is sorting their materials correctly.
As students study the impact of immigrants and the development of the …
As students study the impact of immigrants and the development of the United States, regionally and as a whole, early South Asian immigration should be discussed. Early South Asian immigrants played a significant role in the nation’s economic and agricultural development, especially in California. Early South Asian immigrants formed their own communities and created unique communities with other marginalized communities around them, such as Black, Mexican, and Puerto Rican communities. This lesson focuses on the experiences and impact of these early South Asian Americans.
2021 Social Science Standards Integrated with Ethnic Studies: Civics and Government: 5.1, 5.4, 6.4 Economics: 4.4 Historical Knowledge: 5.22, 6.20, 6.21 Historical Thinking: 5.23, 5.24, 6.23, 6.24, 6.28 Social Science Analysis: 4.21, 4.24, 5.26, 5.27
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