Activity

Mapping Your Community Through Time

Student teams investigate the social, cultural, economic, aesthetic, and environmental components of their community to create map overlays and reports describing the development of their community through time.

Community Character

Students explore community character and investigate ways that communities, including their own, are responding to growth and development pressures.

Personal Places

Students investigate and report on their connection with a special place and with their greater community.

Researching Forests Around the World

Students explore their connections to the world’s forests by researching a forest in another country or region and by creating a profile about that forest.

Making Consumer Choices

Using paper as an example, students analyze the life cycle and consumption patterns of forest products, and identify the international dimensions of product use. They then draw conclusions about consuming forest products in a more intelligent way.

Exploring the World Marketplace

Students conduct a simulation in which countries use their forest resources to “manufacture” products and to sell them to an international trader. Through the simulation, students explore some of the tradeoffs of resource use.

Seeking Sustainability: A Global Response

Students consider indicators that a forest is sustainable, and learn about one international initiative for monitoring forest sustainability. They also find out what is being done locally and in other countries to determine sustainability.

Understanding the Effects of Forest Uses

In this activity, students analyze the effects of different ways that people use the world’s forests and determine which effects may be sustainable according to one definition.

Analyzing Patterns of Forest Change

Students analyze factors that can change forests by using data sets, maps and other information. They also examine projections about future climate conditions and explore how these factors may change forests in the 21st century.

Mapping the World’s Forests

A holistic system of global ecological zones is now used to classify the world’s forests. In this activity, students examine this system to see how temperature and moisture determine the type of forest in a given locale.