students will determine the water use in their home
students will understand the term water efficiency and the importance of conserving natural resources
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students will determine the water use in their home The students will create their own terrarium to connect concepts of precipitation, condensation, and evaporation. A portfolio is a record demonstrating what students learn over an extended period of time for a specific unit such as a “global water crisis” unit or “water-awareness” unit. The introduction of a water portfolio is an effective technique teachers can use to interface water curriculum with ongoing assignments and activities in any subject including economics, geography, biology, language arts, social studies, and environmental science. Students will participate in several different activities in order to lean about the importance of water in our daily lives. Students will estimate the proportion of potable water on Earth and compare it to the rest of the water on the planet. Students work in small groups. Instruct them to draw a large circle with a marker on white sheet of paper. Offer them two sheets of different-colored construction paper. One color represents available fresh water; the other represents the rest of the water on the planet. Next, inform students that they will be tearing the two sheets of paper into a total of 100 small pieces. Students will estimate how many pieces will represent potable water and how many pieces will indicate the rest of the water on the planet. Instruct each group to tear up their paper and arrange the 100 pieces within the circle so that these pieces reflect their estimates. Have groups record the number of pieces representing “potable” water and “remaining” water. |
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