This video adapted from the Valdez Museum & Historical Archive, explores what …
This video adapted from the Valdez Museum & Historical Archive, explores what happened during the Great Alaska Earthquake of 1964 through original footage, first-person accounts, and animations illustrating plate tectonics.
This article provides a variety of opportunities to teach grammar in context …
This article provides a variety of opportunities to teach grammar in context as well as vocabulary found in units on emergencies, and natural disasters, etc. In particular, paragraphs 6-10 are a narrative of the events on the day of the eruption.
Natural disasters require communities to work together. Students will: come up with …
Natural disasters require communities to work together. Students will: come up with a definition of community and discuss the different the communities they are a part of; talk about a time they have helped someone in their community and why; watch a video clip of a group of young boys helping their community in Japan in the aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami; discuss what it feels like to help people and how it feels to receive help; discuss a time the students worked together to achieve a goal; come up with ideas of how to help people who are affected by natural disasters.
Has your attention recently been caught by news of coastal catastrophes such …
Has your attention recently been caught by news of coastal catastrophes such as hurricanes and tsunamis? Do you wonder why so many coastal communities in the world are vulnerable to flooding and other coastal hazards? Have you considered what coastal flood protections cities like Houston and Miami will need in the future to protect their residents? This course will provide a better understanding of these phenomena. We present a global perspective of coastal landscapes, the geologic processes responsible for their formation, and ways that society responds to hazards like sea level rise and catastrophic weather events. You will participate in active learning exercises such as analyzing real-world datasets and applying critical thinking to real-world societal problems while investigating a coastal community.
Welcome to Crash Course Office Hours! Alizé Carrère and April Luginbuhl Mather …
Welcome to Crash Course Office Hours! Alizé Carrère and April Luginbuhl Mather answer your questions on human and physical geography, including how rocks form, how melting glaciers impact water resources, and what even is geography?
Chapters: Introduction What is geography? Place, space, and location Site, situation and scale How do different types of rock form? Reducing the impacts of earthquakes and volcanoes How is a meander formed? Origin and formation of fjords How can mountain ecosystems be restore from the impact of development and tourism? Impact of melting Himalayan glaciers on water resources What is posthumanism? Who are significant geographers? Different types of boundaries What are the markers of development? What is in a geography course? Tips for studying geography Why do we personally find geography interesting? How to talk to students about the politics of maps Displacement of people due to war, natural disasters, and changing coastlines How do metamorphic rocks form? Careers for people who study geography Outro
You are preparing your family’s emergency kits in case there is a …
You are preparing your family’s emergency kits in case there is a need to leave your home quickly, or stay in your home without electricity or water. You need to be able to create an emergency supply kit that includes a lightweight water filtration device that is low cost. This will provide you with clean water regardless of your water source.
In this project, you will gain knowledge of natural disaster preparedness through the Red Cross Pillowcase project. You will research and experiment with the water cycle to learn how water is naturally filtered. You will then design and build a water filtration device that could filter water in an emergency situation.
Students chose a room where they spend a significant amount of time. …
Students chose a room where they spend a significant amount of time. Next, they assess the room for earthquake hazards, create a map depicting where these hazards are located, and finally, describe what would happen during an earthquake for a given intensity.
This set of lessons looks at a variety of natural disasters from …
This set of lessons looks at a variety of natural disasters from the Black Death of the Middle Ages to Hurricane Katrina in our too-recent memory, to fears of avian flu pandemics that haunt the future through the lens of economic analysis. The contexts were chosen to facilitate the teaching of economic reasoning principles not only in economics courses, but also in history and the other social studies disciplines. Each lesson addresses a question that reflects people's compassionate reaction to news of disaster and develops one or two key tools of economic analysis in answering that question. Case studies of past disasters provide real-world illustrations. Mandated content standards and testing have kicked 'current events' days from the social studies classroom calendar, transforming disasters from 'teachable moments' to curricular inconvenience. Using the economic way of thinking to sift through the chaos of natural disasters, however, reveals threads of uniformity running through the litany of horrors and devastation unique to each event. Once identified, the common features of past disasters form a template for analyzing 'the next one,' allowing teachers to quickly incorporate today's unexpected news into the planned curriculum outline.
In this lesson on extreme weather conditions and natural disasters, students will …
In this lesson on extreme weather conditions and natural disasters, students will research and present information about the definition, causes, consequences, and recent statistics of various weather-related phenomena. Through group work, presentations, and a reflective follow-up activity, they will deepen their understanding of these topics and their impact on human life and the natural environment. The lesson follows task based learning framework.
This class is designed to expose you to the cycles of disasters, …
This class is designed to expose you to the cycles of disasters, the roots of emergency planning in the U.S., how to understand and map vulnerabilities, and expose you to the disaster planning in different contexts, including in developing countries.
This class is designed to expose you to the cycles of disasters, …
This class is designed to expose you to the cycles of disasters, the roots of emergency planning in the U.S., how to understand and map vulnerabilities, and expose you to the disaster planning in different contexts, including in developing countries.
These introductory plans will springboard students into the fictional text, Night of …
These introductory plans will springboard students into the fictional text, Night of the Twister. This modified text, and informational PowerPoint featuring four natural disasters, was inspired by a real event that happened in Nebraska in 1980. The modified text was created using more simplistic language while keeping the main idea intact. Students will recount events and analyze characteristics that define natural disasters, while answering the overarching unit question: How do natural disasters impact us? This set of lessons is intended to span between 5-10 instructional periods and will also set the stage for specific learning structures and routines. Students will use response strategies to identify how nature can impact us. Through reading and discussion, students will cite key details and make inferences based evidence that support the main idea of portions of the text read. Included are examples of text dependent questions and sample questions to guide instruction. Contained in this plan are day-by-day lessons.
In this multi-step lab, students explore the concepts of seismic wave propagation …
In this multi-step lab, students explore the concepts of seismic wave propagation through materials with different mechanical properties, and examine seismic evidence from a recent earthquake to infer Earth's internal structure and composition. They calculate the diameter of Earth's core by comparing a model to recorded seismic data, then explore mechanical differences between the lithosphere and the asthenosphere, and then examine models of the boundary between the lithosphere and the asthenosphere. This lab is designed to be done with an instructor present to answer questions and guide students to conclusions.
Geography 430 is an active, creative learning community focused around understanding the …
Geography 430 is an active, creative learning community focused around understanding the changing relationships between people and their environments, the causes and consequences of environmental degradation, strategies for building a more sustainable world, and the methods and approaches that scholars have used to understand human-environment interactions. The primary course objectives are to help geographers, earth scientists, and other professionals to deepen their appreciation for the complexity of human-environment systems and to develop skills that allow them to interpret, analyze, and communicate effectively regarding human-environment interactions in their lives as students, professionals, and citizens.
In the past 100 years deaths from natural disasters have decreased by …
In the past 100 years deaths from natural disasters have decreased by more than half, despite a more than 4-fold population growth during the same time. What is it that we have learnt? Get transcript for video here: https://www.oercommons.org/courseware/module/58789/overview
Students use a Python script to download position, size and foretasted position …
Students use a Python script to download position, size and foretasted position and size of hurricanes into a spreadsheet from NOAA hurricane forecasts. They then display the actual and foretasted hurricane positions in ArcMap. Finally students look at which counties in the United States have had the highest amount of hurricane activity. Students display their work in a multi-part map, or a series of maps.
In this project students will first research the landslide-prone Seattle area using …
In this project students will first research the landslide-prone Seattle area using provided websites to gather background and perspective for the second part of the assignment. In the second part of the assignment students evaluate several actual properties in the Seattle area using a city government website that utilizes the GIS mapping system. Following their use of the online map and other suggested resources they will rank the properties in order of relative landslide hazard and provide a written evaluation of their rankings.
Students create a web and define the word "resilience," read a blog …
Students create a web and define the word "resilience," read a blog about the resilience of one Brooklyn school community that was hit by Hurricane Sandy, and consider what being prepared and resilient might mean at their own school.
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