Provided by: ASU Global Futures |Published on: July 20, 2021
Lesson Plans
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Synopsis
In this activity, students will learn how an increase in visitors is impacting national parks and then have a debate about limiting the number of visitors to national parks.
Teachers will use these slides from ASU to teach this lesson.
Students can prepare for their arguments by reading the information found in the linked articles.
This lesson cuts across many subject areas.
Additional Prerequisites
Teachers should check that they can access the articles in their region. If the articles are not accessible, teachers should find alternative articles for students to use as they prepare their arguments.
The "Every Kid in a Park" link no longer works. This lesson is still great because there are at least two resources for each side of the debate.
Differentiation
Students can debate in small or large groups.
After the debate students could research the national parks that get the least visitors each year and come up with a public service campaign to promote those parks in order to redistribute the number of visitors going to the same parks.
Other resources on this topic include this video from the National Park Service about a program that brings students from urban high schools into the national parks to learn about the environment, this video on how nature can boost your health, and this video on the water infrastructure system built for visitors to a national park.
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About the Partner Provider
ASU College of Global Futures
The ASU College of Global Futures is committed to creating and providing curricular resources that span a diverse range of topics--including food systems, sustainability, quality of life and well-being, decision-making for sustainability, and much more. The lessons are applicable for grades 6-9 with variations presented that will enable teachers to tailor the activities for more ages outside of that range.
Related Teaching Resources
All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.