Provided by: Population Connection |Published on: September 20, 2022
Articles/Websites
9101112AP
Synopsis
This slide presentation thoroughly describes the impact of the human population on the environment, especially related to anthropogenic climate change.
The slides provide basics about the carbon cycle, findings from recent climate reports, and graphs to demonstrate the role of various countries and industries in greenhouse gas emissions over time.
The slides show how population growth, land use, and climate change are intricately linked, and include information on biodiversity loss, deforestation, and renewable energy.
This resource is incredibly comprehensive in describing how climate change and human interactions with the environment are linked.
Reputable resources are linked throughout the report, providing evidence in the form of data and graphs to illustrate various issues related to climate change.
This serves as a great opportunity for students to practice their scientific literacy.
Additional Prerequisites
Learners should understand that burning fossil fuels leads to the emission of greenhouse gases, which cause climate change.
Reading line graphs and bar charts is a necessary skill to understand the evidence presented in these slides.
Learners should be familiar with ecological vocabulary such as ecosystem, restoration, deforestation, renewable energy, etc.
Differentiation
As this resource is very large and comprehensive it will most likely need to be used in different sections throughout a longer unit or course. Consider using some of the information and sources in the slides as a jumping off point to learn about different topics such as agriculture's impact on climate change, deforestation, renewable energy, or human impacts from fossil fuel usage.
Social studies and history classrooms could use the information in these slides to begin to examine the impact of human population growth on the environment over time. There are also many connections that could be drawn to gender equity and access to reproductive healthcare.
Consider having students process the information in this resource by dividing different topics presented between groups and having them present on what they learn through reading and further research on their topic.
This could serve as an excellent resource for a class working on research papers related to climate change.