Fourth National Climate Assessment (2018) - Midwest
Provided by: CLEAN |Published on: March 12, 2024
Lesson Plans
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Synopsis
This teacher guide for the Midwest section of the National Climate Assessment includes background information, a synopsis, related lesson plans, activities, guiding questions, and videos to help teachers facilitate learning.
Students will explore the Key Messages presented in the report and reference the U.S. Climate Resilience Toolkits to understand the many effects of climate change in the Midwest region of the United States.
The guide includes activities and lesson plans to engage students with different learning styles.
Teachers can find lessons for a range of grade levels and topics.
Additional Prerequisites
Students should understand the causes behind climate change and be familiar with some of the impacts.
Under Key Message 2, the video "The Second Solution: Riparian Restoration" is no longer available in the collection.
Under Key Message 3, the video "The Difference Between Weather and Climate" is no longer available in the collection.
Under Key Message 4, the lesson plans "Climate Change and Human Health" (also under Key Message 6) and "Air: Fuel for Thought" (also under Key Message 5) are no longer available in the collection.
Under Key Message 5, the "Extreme Event Role Playing Game by the National Academy of Science" link is broken, but can be accessed here instead.
Teachers can't access many links under Other Related Resources for the Midwest Chapter.
Differentiation
Math or science teachers can post the charts, graphs, maps, and other figures around the room and have students participate in a data gallery walk.
After reading the "Case Study: Adaptation in Forestry," students can expand their knowledge about the Menominee people and their preservation efforts with a resource like this video.
To make the effects addressed in the assessment more concrete, students can discuss how they notice climate change impacting their lives or how the impacts outlined will affect their lives.
Students in English language arts classes can create public service announcements about the human health impacts of climate change.
Scientist Notes
Teaching Tips
Standards
Resource Type and Format
About the Partner Provider
CLEAN
The CLEAN Network is a professionally diverse community of over 630 members committed to improving climate and energy literacy locally, regionally, nationally, and globally in order to enable responsible decisions and actions. The CLEAN Network has been a dynamic group since 2008 and is now led by the CLEAN Leadership Board established in 2016.
Related Teaching Resources
All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.