EE-Link Intro
Prof
Resources
Class
Resources
Orgs
& Projects
 |
Enviro Facts
Grants & Jobs
Net Sevices
EE
Calendar |

Site Map Search |
Features: Superlative Sites
What's New En
Español>
Übertragung unterbrochen
WIDTH="130" VALIGN="TOP">
 |
EE Activities - Superlative Sites
Untitled Document
The WWW offers a fantastic array of resources,
which we might sort into two categories. Most of the links on
EE-link are in the category of "ordinary information that
makes what you are doing a little more efficient." A smaller
number of sites offer tools or ideas that might actually change
the way you or you students deal with or understand environmental
issues. On this page, we'll offer short lists of such sites, organized
to present a coherent EE perspective on the environment through
the Internet.
Perspective 1: Project-based Learning. If the end goal
is for students to extend awareness and appreciation of the environment
into action, then EE must create opportunities for kids
to practice action skills. They need to evaluate, collaborate,
communicate and advocate. Student-directed projects both teach
these skills and achieve real environmental improvements. Here
are four examples:
1. Adobe
Creek Restoration Project: Students at Casa Grande High School
began with 3 situations:
1) Government agencies had labeled the creek
"dead" and a nuisance, and plans had been
drawn up to put it in an underground tube.
2) The Creek's Steelhead Trout numbers were
dwindling, bound for extinction.
3) Young people were looking for a way to
feel connected to their environment and
a positive outlook on their future. |
 Project results: In the project's
13 years, students have restored riparian habitat, educated the
community, stopped diversions by the City, and raised 500,000
for a fish hatchery, restoring salmon and steelhead runs. |
2. Earth Force 
is a national project supporting locally-focused, student-directed
civic improvement projects as part of the CAPS (Community Action
and Problem Solving) program. Earth Force targets middle school
students in CAPS programs and in Get
Out Spok'n, a national effort to make communities more
bike-friendly. |
CAPS programs
address issues including:
1) Health Hazards: Students in Erie,
PA, have been working after school to inform the community about
the health hazards of eating Lake Erie fish.
2) Water Quality: Students in Colorado
areexamining drinking water quality in a low-income neighborhood.
3) Endangered Species Protection: Students
in West
Palm Beach, FL, are working to increase the survival
rate of sea turtles by posting county-made public
awareness signs at local beaches.
4) Wildlife Habitat: Walnut Creek
Middle School students, in Millcreek PA, are creating a
wildlife habitat near their schools, featuring native plants
and nesting boxes designed and built by students. |
4. Mapping
Our City: Students in several Boston middle schools were
given assistance with sophisticated GIS tools. They integrated
their own data and printed reports (especially from the Army
Corps of Engineers) with GIS techniques to evaluate water quality.
The project was significantly motivated by an advocacy group's
invitation to present their findings! |
 |
Perspective 2: Maps. Have students investigate the status
of their local environment from the neighborhood to the planetary
level. The following series of sites will suggest questions about
the interplay of climate, geography, and human activities on
the Earth. |
 |
- Locate yourself in space at the Interactive
Earth site. See the position of the earth in space, right
now, as it appears from the moon's surface, or from 200 kilometers
above you.
- Locate yourself geographically. Enter your address, and the
ArcData
On-line site delivers a map of your school and neighboood.
Zoom out to view your city, county, and state. Also check demographic
maps that display important clues about interaction with the
environment, such as commute time, vehicles per household, poverty
rate, migratory status, etc.
- Look at your area from an ecosystem perpsective on Sierra
Club's Critical
Ecoregions page. Quick readable illustrated descriptions
of the environmental character of 21 US Ecoregions. Includes
a summary of environmental issues and links other sites.
- Locate your watershed at the US
EPA Surf Your Watershed site. How are you connected to the
ocean through streams, rivers, and groundwater? You can view
the aquatic environment down to a radius of 1 mile. From the
EnviroMapper
page you can find your community and astonishing details: quality
indices for drinking water and wetlands, level of forest cover,
pesticide and ferilizer runoff, soil permeability, superfund
sites, etc.
- Find the sources of toxic discharges in your area from the
the Environmental
Scorecard site. Enter your zip code to find waste generating
sites and information about the types and quantities of toxins
released. The HazDat
map presents the same kinds of information in greater detail.
The map is a little difficult to navigate, but gives you usefully
precise data: samples from ABC Drum's facility in Michigan contained
2.4 ppm of trichloroethane. (Look up fact sheets on toxic materials
on this site too).
- Investigate the environmental positions that your local legislators
have taken on environmental issues at the National
Environmental Scorecard site. Enter your zip code to find
your representatives in congress and the senate. The site will
tell you their voting records, and explain the environmental
laws they have considered.
Links
for EE Activities - Superlative Sites:
|