Pre-Trip Curriculum: Earth's Water as an Apple
Grades: 4-8, adaptations for older students included
Subject: Geography, fractions, percentages, critical thinking
Duration: 30-45mins
Title: Earths Water as an Apple
Objectives:
Students will be able to examine the earth's water systems from a global perspective.
Students will understand how land and water are connected on the planet.
Students will be better prepared to examine the interconnections between humans and the environment during their time at the Headlands Institute.
The earth's surface is mostly water. Most of that water is stored in the earth's oceans. Very little of the earth's water freshwater, and an even smaller percentage of that freshwater is available for human consumption.
In ocean areas with the most life tend to be along coastlines where continental slopes drop off. The open ocean has vast areas with little productivity. In these areas, few plants can grow, so even fewer animals are capable of living there over long periods of time.
The greatest productivity in the ocean is within the top 100 meters of the surface. This is the depth to which sunlight penetrates, known as the photic zone. All marine life depends on photosynthesizing plants, particularly phytoplankton Plants in this zone use sunlight to create food through photosynthesis. Even within the zone, the amount of light drops off dramatically. Only 1 % of the surface light penetrates down 100 meters.
Where currents meet along the equator, waters are very high in nutrients. Higher nutrient content means greater productivity, and therefore there are many species of marine plants and animals. Along the western margins of continents, there are areas of upwelling, where deep cold water rich with nutrients rises to the surface due to earth's rotation and wind. The nutrients in this water serve as food for plankton, the organisms that serve as the base of most ocean food webs. Upwelling areas are critical for plankton populations which affect migrating seabirds, marine mammals, and for fishing industries throughout the world.
1. A large world map
2. Smaller world maps for each group (optional)
3. A piece of paper with a large circle drawn on it for a pie chart (optional)
4. One apple for each pair of students and one for the teacher, or just one apple for you to demonstrate for your students
5. Plastic knives, or one knife if you are demonstrating for younger children
6. 20 completed labels, prepared in advance
7. 25 blank labels the students will complete during the activity
8. Paper plates or recycled cardboard, one for each pair of students, to catch apple juice
1. In advance, prepare 20 labels with the following terms: oceans, land, mountains, swamps, lakes, deserts, rivers, land that grows food, river basin, ice, drinkable water, productive zones, non-productive zones, habitable, uninhabitable, too wet, too hot, too dry, and too cold.
2. Give each pair of students an apple and tell them it represents the earth.
3. Distribute to each pair a knife and the pre-cut paper for labels.
4. Ask the students to observe and follow your demonstration.
- Write out all the labels (e.g. usable fresh, water, uninhabitable, oceans) with definitions and ask students match those categories with the corresponding fractions.
- To increase the mathematical component of this lesson, have students convert fractions into percentages.
This lesson plan was adapted for the classroom by John Carlstroem, former HI Instructor, from information published in Kelp Forest Habitat Guide, San Francisco Bay Chapter, Oceanic Society, 1986, by Roberta Dean, Catherine Halverson, Stephanie Kaza and Craig Strange of Project Ocean.
4th grade Science 2a, 3d Math: Number sense, 1.5-1.7, 1.9, Measurement/geometry 1.1, Statistics 1.1
5th grade Science 3a,d Math: Number sense 1.1-1.2, 1.5, 2.4-2.5, Algebra 1.1
6th grade Science 5a,b,e Math: Number sense 1.2, 2.1-2.4
7th grade
Math: Number sense 1.3
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