Teaching Activities
Earth education activities from across all of the sites within the Teach the Earth portal.
Grade Level
Online Readiness
Resource Type: Activities
Subject Show all
Project Show all
- CLEAN 35 matches
- CUREnet 3 matches
- Curriculum for the Bioregion 8 matches
- Cutting Edge 57 matches
- Earth Educators Rendezvous 3 matches
- GEODE 2 matches
- GeoEthics 1 match
- Geoscience in Two-year Colleges 1 match
- Guided Inquiry Introductory Geology Labs 1 match
- Integrate 12 matches
- Oceans in the News 2 matches
- Pedagogy in Action 5 matches
- Project EDDIE 2 matches
- Quantitative Skills 4 matches
- SISL 2 matches
- Starting Point-Teaching Entry Level Geoscience 15 matches
- Teach the Earth 7 matches
- TIDeS 1 match
Results 1 - 10 of 161 matches
Bomb Cyclones - They're Explosive! part of Project EDDIE:Teaching Materials:Modules
Jacqui Degan, Cape Fear Community College
Storms can have devastating impacts on coastal communities. Typically, tropical storms like hurricanes get the most attention, but there are other types of storms that occur at more northern latitudes that can be ...
Resource Type: Activities: Activities
Subject: Geoscience:Oceanography, Environmental Science:Natural Hazards:Extreme Weather:Hurricanes, Geoscience:Atmospheric Science:Meteorology:Extreme weather, Geoscience:Atmospheric Science:Meteorology, Geoscience:Atmospheric Science, Geology:Environmental Geology, Environmental Science:Natural Hazards:Extreme Weather
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary, Passed Peer Review
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Explore Real Data from an Ice Core part of Teaching Activities
Jason Cervenec, Ohio State University-Main Campus; Stacy Porter, Wittenberg University
Ice core data allow students to explore a number of patterns while learning that researchers need to gather and interpret evidence to understand Earth's past. Students will explore core data collected in ...
Resource Type: Activities: Activities:Classroom Activity, Lab Activity
Subject: Geoscience:Oceanography
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
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Module 5 Human Dimensions in the Poles part of Oceans in the News:Oceans in the News – Polar Ocean Science, Data, and the Media
Jonathan Cohen, University of Delaware; Matthew Oliver, University of Delaware; Victoria E Simons, University of Delaware
This unit covers the concept of bioaccumulation of contaminants in a food web, all the way up to humans. Students learn about what constitutes a contaminant, how contaminants can accumulate in an organism and move ...
Resource Type: Activities: Activities, Course Module
Subject: Environmental Science:Water Quality and Quantity:Non-Point Source Pollution, Biology:Ecology:Food Webs, Environmental Science:Waste, Human Population:Nutrition and Famine, Environmental Science:Ecosystems:Ecology, Geoscience:Oceanography
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
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Justice, Power, and Activism: What the Goldman Environmental Prize Winners Teach Us About Resilience and Democracy part of Curriculum for the Bioregion:Activities
Jason Lambacher, University of Washington-Tacoma Campus
This activity is a set of student-centered exercises that enable students to learn about the individual stories of Goldman environmental prize winners, the activism and organizing that grounds their work, and the underlying political and social contexts from which their struggles emerge. The lesson inspires critical reflection about justice, power, and democracy in green politics, and encourages ways to make personal connections to activism and environmental work.
Resource Type: Activities: Activities
Subject: Geoscience:Soils, Environmental Science:Energy, Soils and Agriculture, Sustainability, Geoscience:Oceanography, Geography, Anthropology, Health Sciences, Geography:Human/Cultural, Environmental Science:Global Change and Climate:Climate Change, Geoscience:Atmospheric Science:Climate Change, Sociology, Business, Economics, Environmental Science:Policy:Environmental Ethics/Values, Political Science, Environmental Science, History
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
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Climate Change Mind Map part of Curriculum for the Bioregion:Activities
Woody Moses, Highline Community College
Online Readiness: Online Adaptable
Resource Type: Activities: Activities
Subject: Biology, Geoscience, Environmental Science:Global Change and Climate:Climate Change, Environmental Science, Chemistry, Geoscience:Atmospheric Science:Climate Change, Geoscience:Oceanography
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
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Unit 1: Ocean Introduction part of Ocean Sustainability
MICHELLE KINZEL, Southwestern College; Astrid Schnetzer, North Carolina State University; Cara Thompson, Arizona State University at the West Campus
In this unit, students explore the role of ocean circulation in climate modification and bioproductivity. The activities require students to interpret the effect of horizontal and vertical seawater movement on heat ...
Online Readiness: Online Adaptable
Resource Type: Activities: Activities, Course Module
Subject: Geoscience:Oceanography:Biological, Chemical, Geoscience:Geology:Environmental Geology, Geoscience:Oceanography:Ocean-Climate Interactions, Geoscience:Oceanography, Environmental Science, Biology:Biogeochemistry, Geoscience:Atmospheric Science:Climate Change, Environmental Science:Global Change and Climate:Climate Change
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
Learn more about this review process.
Learn more about this review process.
Unit 5: Oceans in Protection: Marine Protected Areas part of Ocean Sustainability
MICHELLE KINZEL, Southwestern College; Astrid Schnetzer, North Carolina State University; Cara Thompson, Arizona State University at the West Campus
Students will review current ocean pressures related to overfishing and human impacts on ocean ecosystems. By examining data collected in relation to the presence of marine reserves, students will explore long-term ...
Resource Type: Activities: Course Module, Activities
Subject: Geoscience:Oceanography, Oceanography:Marine Resources, Biological, Biology:Ecology:Habitats:Marine, Biology:Ecology, Environmental Science:Ecosystems:Biodiversity, Ecology, Environmental Science:Sustainability, Geoscience:Geology:Environmental Geology, Environmental Science:Oceans and Coastal Resources
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary, Passed Peer Review
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Unit 3: Oceans As Habitat: Sustaining Life in the Ocean part of Ocean Sustainability
MICHELLE KINZEL, Southwestern College; Astrid Schnetzer, North Carolina State University; Cara Thompson, Arizona State University at the West Campus
Students will be able to identify the functional roles that organisms play in ocean ecosystems. How do human-induced changes in ocean conditions affect biodiversity, and thereby the health and resilience of a coral ...
Resource Type: Activities: Activities, Course Module
Subject: Geoscience:Oceanography:Ocean-Climate Interactions, Geoscience:Oceanography, Biology:Ecology:Food Webs, Geoscience:Oceanography:Marine Resources, Biological, Geoscience:Geology:Environmental Geology, Geoscience:Oceanography:Chemical, Biology:Ecology:Habitats:Marine, Biology:Ecology, Environmental Science:Ecosystems, Environmental Science, Ecosystems:Biodiversity, Environmental Science:Global Change and Climate:Climate Change, Environmental Science:Oceans and Coastal Resources, Sustainability, Geoscience:Atmospheric Science:Climate Change, Biology:Biogeochemistry
Activity Review: Passed Peer Review, Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
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Unit 2: Ocean Conditions: Ancient to Modern part of Ocean Sustainability
MICHELLE KINZEL, Southwestern College; Astrid Schnetzer, North Carolina State University; Cara Thompson, Arizona State University at the West Campus
Students will be provided with seawater pH and carbon dioxide concentration (pCO2) data spanning as far back as 1850. They will describe trends in pH, pCO2 and atmospheric CO2 concentration, outline why these ...
Online Readiness: Online Adaptable
Resource Type: Activities: Activities:Classroom Activity:Short Activity:Think-Pair-Share, Activities, Course Module
Subject: Geoscience:Oceanography:Ocean-Climate Interactions, Chemical, Geoscience:Geology:Environmental Geology, Geoscience:Oceanography, Biology:Biogeochemistry:Carbon Cycling, Environmental Science, Global Change and Climate:Climate Change:Impacts of climate change, Biology:Biogeochemistry, Geoscience:Atmospheric Science:Climate Change:Impacts of climate change, Environmental Science:Global Change and Climate:Climate Change
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
Learn more about this review process.
Learn more about this review process.
Community Flood Risk Assessment from Rising/Surging Seas Project part of CUREnet:Institutes:Other Institutes (2019-2020):Examples
Kevin Kupietz, Elizabeth City State University
Globally 634 million people, 10% of the world's population, live in coastal areas less than 10 meters above sea level. According to 2010 census data, 123 million people, 39% of the United States population, live in coastal counties with an estimated increase to this number by 8% in the 2020 census. As natural disasters have been seen to increase in frequency and severity in the past five years coupled with expected sea rises from climate change it is important that anyone involved with the safety and resiliency planning of their organization/community have an understanding of how to scientifically assess risk from flooding in order to mitigate and recover from the effects. This project allows students the ability to develop skills to utilize computer modeling systems and to apply the data to real world communities in examining risk to structures as well as different groups in the community.
Resource Type: Activities: Activities
Subject: Geoscience:Oceanography:Marine Resources, Geoscience:Oceanography, Environmental Science, Psychology, Sociology, Geoscience:Hydrology, Geoscience, Environmental Science:Natural Hazards, Global Change and Climate, Sustainability, Land Use and Planning, Oceans and Coastal Resources, Engineering, Computer Science, Environmental Science:Ecosystems, Social Science
Activity Review: Peer Reviewed as Exemplary
See the activity page for details.