November 28, 2022 | By Rae
Nature of Fire features three PLT activities for educators of students in grades 6-8 about sustainable forest management and strategies to reduce catastrophic wildfire, ensure resilient forests, maintain forests, and restore degraded lands.
November 28, 2022 | By Rae
Biodiversity Blitz, part of PLT’s themed series for educators, features three grades 3-5 activities that invite learners to investigate species variability in an ecosystem, and how this variability – or biodiversity – helps sustain life on Earth.
December 28, 2020 | By Project Learning Tree
Students explore the environmental, social, and economic criteria of forest certification and consider possible benefits and limitations of certification for both forests and people.
December 28, 2020 | By Project Learning Tree
Using data collected from Mauna Loa, students graph changes in atmospheric levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) over the course of several decades and identify possible reasons for those changes.
December 28, 2020 | By Project Learning Tree
Students model what happens to renewable and nonrenewable resources over time and discover why sustainable use of natural resources is so important.
December 28, 2020 | By Project Learning Tree
Never underestimate the power of a tree! In addition to giving us an amazing array of paper and wood products, trees provide a host of other benefits—from shading our backyards to reducing air pollution to helping stabilize the global climate.
December 28, 2020 | By Project Learning Tree
Our nation’s forests are managed to support different outcomes. Students learn how forests can be managed to meet human and environmental needs and examine national parks to identify challenges that forest managers face meeting different needs.
December 28, 2020 | By Project Learning Tree
Succession is a natural pattern of change that takes place over time in a forest or other ecosystem. Students read a story about succession and investigate the connections among plants, animals, and successional stages in a local ecosystem.
December 28, 2020 | By Project Learning Tree
Every living thing has a habitat—a place that meets its needs. Human beings’ habitat is the community in which they live.