Standard Number:9
Xpedition Hall
Check out:
X14: The Garden

Standards
- Standard #14: How human actions modify the physical environment

Activities
- Aral Sea
- Department of Crane-Land Security

Lesson Plans

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Grade level:
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Select Lesson Plan:  
Taking Care of Our Oceans
Overview:
In a 2000 report, the World Resources Institute stated the following: "In 1995, over 2.2 billion people—39 percent of the world's population—lived within 100 km of a coast, an increase from 2 billion people in 1990. The coastal area accounts for only 20 percent of all land area." According to 2002 data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, over 50 percent of people in the United States live within 50 miles of the ocean or Great Lakes.

High coastal population densities have an impact on marine life, such as sea turtles and manatees. In this lesson, students will consider why so many people live near the coast and learn about the impacts of this trend on ocean animals. They will make posters to educate coastal residents and visitors about human impacts on marine life.

Connections to the Curriculum:
Geography, life sciences
Connections to the National Geography Standards:
Standard 12: "The processes, patterns, and functions of human settlement"
Standard 14: "How human actions modify the physical environment"
Time:
Two hours

Materials Required:
  • Computer with Internet access
  • Wall map of the world or United States
  • Poster paper and drawing/writing materials
Objectives:
Students will
  • compare pictures of two beaches and describe their own experiences at the beach;
  • analyze a United States population distribution map;
  • discuss why so many people live near the coast;
  • discuss the impacts of dense coastal populations on marine life;
  • view and discuss pictures of animals that are affected by coastal populations; and
  • make posters to educate coastal residents and visitors about human impacts on marine life.
Geographic Skills:
Asking Geographic Questions
Acquiring Geographic Information
Organizing Geographic Information
Answering Geographic Questions
Analyzing Geographic Information

S u g g e s t e d   P r o c e d u r e
Opening:
Ask students if they have ever been to the beach. If so, what was it like? Were there many people there? Were there a lot of buildings or was it a "deserted" beach?

Show students these two pictures of beaches:

Ocean City Maryland: Perfect Beach Resort
Assateague Island National Seashore

Ask students to describe the differences between the pictures. Which one looks more like the beaches they've been to? Which one looks most like a place where people would live or go on vacation? Which place looks like it would have the most animals?

Development:
Have students look at the 2000 Population Distribution in the United States map. Explain that the white areas of the map represent places where many people live, and the dark areas are places where there aren't many people.

Help students locate the place where they live on this map. Is it in an area that's heavily or lightly populated?

Ask students to compare this map with a United States or world map in the classroom or in a book. Make sure they can identify the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, the Great Lakes, and the Gulf of Mexico on the Internet map. Also make it clear that Alaska and Hawaii aren't in their correct locations on the map.

Ask students to describe the pattern of settlement in the United States, based on what they see on the Internet map. Do more people live near the East or West coasts or away from them? Students should recognize that many more people live near the coasts than inland, although the Great Lakes and a few pockets in the interior (e.g., Atlanta) are densely populated.

Have students, either as a class or in small groups, brainstorm the reasons why people might choose to live near the coasts rather than in the country's interior. They should think about what the coastal areas have to offer (e.g., more transportation routes and comfortable weather) and what aspects of the interior have historically made it difficult for people to live in (give them a hint about this latter point by pointing out the desert regions of the West and describing the climate there).

If students have brainstormed in small groups, discuss their ideas as a class.

Ask students how they think the high level of coastal settlement might affect the oceans' animals and plants. Discuss their ideas, and list them on the board.

Below are several examples of ways that human settlement in coastal areas negatively impacts marine life. Have students look at the pictures on the Web sites as you describe the things they are seeing, using the guidelines below.

Runoff from the streets into storm drains:

Stormwater Program: City of Los Angeles

The first photograph shows a storm drain. Have students ever seen these drains (or similar ones) in the curbs of their local streets? They can be found even in communities that are far away from the ocean, as the water will drain to rivers or lakes. Anything that goes into one of these storm drains eventually ends up in a lake or the ocean.

The last three pictures show polluted storm drains. This is what happens when people throw cups, fast food packaging, and other materials onto the street. When it rains, everything gets washed off the street into the storm drains. In Los Angeles and many other cities, as water flows through the storm drains, it washes this pollution all the way to the beach and the ocean. Ask students how they think the ocean animals like all this junk in their habitat.

Light pollution:

National Geographic: Turtles in Trouble
National Geographic News: Saving Sea Turtles With a Lights-Out Policy in Florida

Have students look at these pictures as you tell them about sea turtles and light pollution.

Sea turtles swim around the world's warm oceans and nest on the beach. They face many dangers, including light pollution from cities and towns along the coast. When baby sea turtles hatch, they instinctively move toward light—the stars on the horizon and the sea. If artificial lights are present, they often head toward those lights instead and fail to reach the sea. They can die from dehydration, predators, or automobiles.

For more on threats to sea turtles, see Dangers Turtles Face. Very young students may be disturbed by these images (they are actually disturbing for adults), so preview them and decide if they are appropriate for your students.

Boat propellers:

National Geographic: Creature Feature—West Indian Manatees

Have students look at this picture as you tell them about manatees.

Manatees live in the waters of the southeastern United States, the Caribbean, eastern Mexico and Central America, and northeastern South America. They are gentle animals and swim very slowly. Motorboats are a big problem for them—manatees are often injured or killed by boats' propellers because they can't swim out of the way fast enough.

Closing:
Review the concepts students have learned in this lesson. Ask them to describe things that people who live near or visit the ocean can do to keep the beach and water clean and to protect the animals that live there. If students live in a coastal community, discuss the specific issues that affect the ocean and marine life in their area.
Suggested Student Assessment:
Have students make posters to share with people who plan to visit or move to the coast. The posters should educate people about things they should know and do to protect the ocean and its inhabitants. Students may want to draw pictures themselves or print/cut out pictures and paste them to their posters. Older students can practice their writing skills, while younger students might need help labeling their drawings. Students may want to use the National Geographic Print 'n' Go Coloring Book to create color illustrations of ocean animals. Here are a few examples of the animals in the coloring book:

Bottlenose Dolphins
California Sea Lions
Green Sea Turtles

Extending the Lesson:
Help students conduct research to find out whether they have storm drains in their community and, if so, where the runoff goes. If there aren't storm drains in your town, try to find out where water and waste go when it rains. Also investigate whether there are any programs to educate the public about how to keep the local waterways clean. Once you've gathered this information, students can help devise an education program in the form of a presentation, brochure, poster, or other resource to inform other kids or adults about how to protect their local waters.

This lesson is made possible by a generous grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Marine Sanctuary Program.

Related Links:

 

 

 
National Geographic Marco Polo Lesson Plans Activities Atlas Standards Xpeditions Hall Search Xpeditions Xpeditions 00 Introduction 01 The World in Spacial Terms 02 The World in Spacial Terms 03 The World in Spacial Terms 04 Places and Regions 05 Places and Regions 06 Places and Regions 07 Physical Systems 08 Physical Systems 09 Human Systems 10 Human Systems 11 Human Systems 12 Human Systems 13 Human Systems 14 Environment and Society 15 Environment and Society 16 Environment and Society 17 The Uses of Geography 18 The Uses of Geography