|
Understanding Climate Change
| What Do You Know About Climate Change? Activity for grades 3 through 8 Think your an expert on our changing climate? Test your knowledge with this interactive quiz. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Let's Talk with Christina Hulbe about Studying Ice Flows for Clues to Climate Change Article for grades 6 through 12 What's better than watching ice melt? Building a computer model to simulate the melting! Ice flow plays an important role in everything from deep ocean circulation patterns to global warming. | |||
Webpage PDF [plugins: Adobe Acrobat; filesize: 476kb] [pages: 4] More about this Resource | ||||
| Let's Talk with Martin Jeffries about Sea Ice and Climate in Antarctica Article for grades 6 through 12 At the poles, it's possible to study sea ice that's 3,000 years old. Find out what scientists learn by cutting up ice cores and seeing the ice crystals' many different textures and colors. | |||
Webpage PDF [plugins: Adobe Acrobat; filesize: 384kb] [pages: 4] More about this Resource | ||||
| Climate Change Graphics from the Hall of Planet Earth Exhibition Materials for grades 9 through 12 A year without a summer? Volcanic eruptions recorded in ice? Take a look at the world through the eyes of a geologist, and see the effects of climate changes. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Environmental Alphabet Activity for grades Kindergarten through 5 "Atmosphere," "biofuels," "carbon dioxide"—challenge students to spell out their climate change knowledge from A to Z. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
Climate Change Affects Our World
| Living on Ice Activity for grades 3 and up Can you solve these four chilly puzzles about how people and animals live in the Arctic? Put your story telling skills to the test and collect new OLogy trading cards. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Arctic Story Puzzles Activity for grades Kindergarten and up Life in the icy Arctic isn't so hard if you're prepared! Solve the puzzle of how people and polar bears live in a land of ice. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Melting Ice, Rising Seas Article for grades 6 and up Travel to the edge of the Greenland Ice Sheet to find out what could happen if global warming melts it and the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Going, Going, Gone? Article for grades 3 through 8 Today, species are becoming extinct—disappearing from our planet—at a faster rate than ever before. What's behind this increase, and what can be done to slow or stop it? | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Climate Change Circle of Consequences Activity for grades 3 through 12 "Greenhouse effect" and "global warming" are becoming household phrases but how, exactly, are they linked? Explore the interconnections and consequences of climate change. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
Make a Difference
| Be an Energy Saver Activity for grades 3 through 8 When it comes to global warming, your day-to-day actionscan make a big difference—if millions of people do it. Find out what you can do to save energy and slow climate change. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Using Solar Energy Activity for grades 6 through 12 After having students conduct a simple solar energy experiment, challenge them to build a better water heater with this classroom competition. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
Greenhouse Effect & Carbon Cycle
| Make a Terrarium Activity for grades 3 through 8 For billions of years the greenhouse effect has made life possible on Earth. Build a terrarium—your own miniature greenhouse—to see this process at work. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Carbon Dioxide Removal Activity for grades 3 through 8 Students will observe and learn about the carbon cycle in this experiment. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| How Greenhouse Gases Absorb Heat Activity for grades 9 through 12 In this experiment students will observe two model atmospheres to understand how greenhouse gases absorb and hold heat. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
Weather & Climate
| Make Your Own Weather Station Activity for grades 3 through 8 Surrounding Earth is a layer of air, the atmosphere, where conditions are always changing. Try your hand at predicting weather patterns by making a wind vane, a rain gauge, and a barometer. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Video Gallery: Global Ocean Circulation Article for grades 6 through 12 What drives ocean circulation? How does the ocean's movement influence global climate? See firsthand how computer models are helping scientists answer these questions. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| The Ocean's Role in the Climate System Article for grades 6 through 12 The ocean has a huge capacity to absorb carbon dioxide. To combat global warming, should we modify the ocean's chemistry to increase its uptake rates? | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| The Ocean Drives Earth's Climate Activity for all ages Ever wonder what causes ocean currents or how they circulate water and heat between the equator and the poles? Find out with a little food coloring and a hands-on look at convection. | |||
More about this Resource | ||||
| Let's Talk with David Bromwich about Meteorology in the Poles Article for grades 6 through 12 It takes only about a month for any change in Antarctica's weather to be felt in North America—pretty remarkable when you consider that Antarctica is 12,874 kilometers (8,000 miles) away. | |||
Webpage PDF [plugins: Adobe Acrobat; filesize: 440kb] [pages: 5] More about this Resource | ||||
| Let's Talk with Gerd Wendler about Studying Polar Climate Article for grades 6 through 12 Talk about the force of gravity—Antarctica's powerful katabatic winds thunder down from the high polar plateau to the coast, creating wind speeds that typically exceed 100 mph every winter month. | |||
Webpage PDF [plugins: Adobe Acrobat; filesize: 452kb] [pages: 4] More about this Resource | ||||
| Research on the Web: Temperatures Across the Globe Activity for grades 6 through 12 What does latitude have to do with the weather? Quite a bit! Chart annual weather patterns in the U.S. and Antarctica to discover the link between location and weather patterns. | |||
Webpage PDF [plugins: Adobe Acrobat; filesize: 644kb] [pages: 2] More about this Resource | ||||
| NAO: Driving Climate Across the Atlantic Article for grades 9 through 12 The fickle Nordic sister of El Niño, the North Atlantic Oscillation regularly stirs up trouble in Europe, Canada, and the eastern US. Take an in-depth look at the little-known, yet significant, NAO. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Weather Report Evidence and Analysis for grades 6 through 12 You don’t need high-tech equipment like an anemometer to measure the wind speed at your field site. This easy-to-complete weather report helps you classify the wind’s speed by observing its effects. | |||
PDF [plugins: Adobe Acrobat; filesize: 10kb] [pages: 1] More about this Resource | ||||
Paleoclimate
| Melting Glaciers: Clues to Climate Change Article for grades 6 through 12 Travel to the Peruvian Andes with a team of glaciologists, who are racing to observe the world's largest tropical ice cap—before global warming melts it away. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
| Studying Tree Rings to Learn About Global Climate Article for grades 9 through 12 By taking biopsy-like samples from centuries-old Siberian pines, scientists have reconstructed a 300-year record of temperature changes for the Arctic and the Northern Hemisphere. | |||
Webpage More about this Resource | ||||
Reference Lists
| Climate Change Online Resources Reference List for grades Kindergarten through 12 Continue exploring the ways human activity is changing our climate and what these changes mean for our planet with this collection of websites. | |||
More about this Resource |