Provided by: Google Earth |Published on: April 27, 2021
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Synopsis
This video takes students on a virtual trip to five different locations around the world, depicting the changes happening to our world’s forests over time from satellite images.
The five locations are Nuflo de Chavez, Bolivia; Enright, Oregon, USA; Atsimo-Andrefana, Madagascar; Sara, Bolivia; and Mato Grosso, Brazil.
Students will see the extent of deforestation in those locations from 1984-2020.
The music and sound effects make the content more engaging.
It contains short facts and information about deforestation that make it powerful and informative.
Additional Prerequisites
Students should understand that satellite images are real pictures taken of the Earth from space.
Differentiation
Teachers could play this video before a discussion about deforestation, economic growth, population growth, per capita consumption growth, or biodiversity loss.
3rd-5th graders could observe the reduction in green cover from 1984-2020, while middle and high school math students could estimate the surface area of forest lost in the images.
The short facts that pop up could be used for social studies, biology, or ethics classes when discussing sustainability, the rights of other species to exist, how much we rely on natural ecosystems to survive, or how to design economies to support a sustainable future.
Click here for a similar resource from Google Earth on Changing Forests.
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All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.