Provided by: The Kid Should See This |Published on: April 27, 2021
Articles/Websites Grades 6-8, 9-12
Synopsis
In this video, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson explains the difference between weather and climate and discusses the global forces driving climate change.
The resource includes a short article with links to helpful information.
The video uses a helpful metaphor of a man walking a dog to illustrate fluctuations and trends in weather data.
The video provides a concise introduction to weather and climate.
Additional Prerequisites
Students should be familiar with the terms dire, meandering, and fluctuating.
Differentiation
Math classes could use this video as a real-world example of trendlines and data variability. Teachers could use the data in this interactive chart, which shows global average temperature anomalies, to discuss how fluctuations in weather do not directly correspond to the long-term changes in climate.
This video pairs well with this SubjectToClimate lesson plan that uses temperature data to teach trends and variability.
Other resources on this topic include this CK-12 video and activity on weather and climate, this NASA article on weather and climate change, this Crash Course video on weather patterns and climate trends, and this Hot Mess video on the real reason people confuse weather and climate.
Scientist Notes
Teaching Tips
Standards
Resource Type and Format
About the Partner Provider
The Kid Should See This
The Kid Should See This is a Webby award-winning collection of over 7,000 kid-friendly videos, curated for teachers and parents who want to share smarter, more meaningful media in the classroom and at home. Selections are grown-up-friendly, too. And thanks to TKSST members, itโs free and ad-free for everyone. Start conversations, spark questions, and inspire offline exploration for all ages.
Related Teaching Resources
All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.