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Education for Sustainable Development
K-12 Lessons Based on Virginia's Standards of Learning

Track Spring's Journey North: Migrations, Mystery Schools, Climate, More
2008 Spring projects begin February 1st
Teachers and students in K-12 classrooms are invited to participate this spring in Journey North's 15th annual global study of wildlife migration and seasonal change. A free Internet-based citizen science project, Journey North enables students in 11,000 schools to watch the wave of spring as it unfolds. They share their local observations with classmates across North America and beyond, and look for patterns on real-time maps. Each Journey North study features many entry points and resources that address learning standards.

Virginia Schools Recycling Survey
Information requested by Virginia Recycling Association to provide support services. Questions: Contact Erica Trout, VRA Association Manager.

Virginia Schools Outdoor Classroom/Learning Center Survey
The Virginia Association for Soil and Water Conservation Districts, the Foundation for Virginia’s Natural Resources, the Virginia Department of Education and the Virginia Office of Environmental Education (VOEE) are compling a listing of classrooms at school locations across the state. We also would like to know if your school has an outdoor learning center or an interest in developing one. Please take a minute to fill out the survey.

Survey for Meaningful Watershed Educational Experience (MWEE)

Teachers

This page offers teachers resources and information for the following:

Professional development opportunities

Workshops & events

  • NASA Engineering Design Challenge - Bring Space Into Your Classroom!
    As NASA plans to return to the moon, plant growth will be an important part of space exploration. NASA scientists anticipate that astronauts may be able to grow plants on the moon in specialized plant growth chambers. Come participate and build your own lunar growth chamber in the NASA Engineering Design Challenge!

Through the NASA Engineering Design Challenge, elementary, middle and high school students will:

  • Design, build, and evaluate lunar plant growth chambers
  • Receive cinnamon basil seeds flown on STS-118
  • Test lunar growth chambers by growing and comparing both
    space-flown and earth-based control seeds

Visit www.nasa.gov/education/plantchallenge to register and to receive more information about the NASA Engineering Design Challenge. You can also sign up for the NASA Express listserv to receive e-mail updates about the challenge and other NASA education activities.

Join the NASA Engineering Design Challenge and be part of space exploration by growing seeds flown in space!

Lessons and SOL based resources

AIR
WATER
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
ENERGY
OTHER

Air

  • Clean Air Partners
    The On the Air curriculum facilitates the understanding of air pollution by studying: Criteria Air Pollutants, the Air Quality Index, Ozone, Particulate Matter, the Health Effects of Air Pollution, Community Sources and Solutions of Air Pollution and Climate Change. Each unit consists of the following: activity description, curricular ties, time needed, learning objectives, materials needed (kit), teacher preparation, teacher background reading, teacher demonstration procedures, activity procedures, technology connections, student handout, student packets and student worksheets.

  • The Air We Breathe
    This colorful picture book is designed to introduce Earth's atmosphere and its importance to life on Earth. It's appropriate for students in grades K-4.

  • Clean Air Champions   

  • Air & Waste Management
    Lessons for air, water and landfills

Water

  • Water Trivia

  • Earth Force
    This website includes a catalog of watershed resources including Virginia Waterways, which addresses the Virginia 6th grade watershed SOL.

  • Virginia Water Resources: A Tool for Teachers
    Information and activities for teachers to support interdisciplinary and problem-based teaching about watersheds, water quality, stewardship, and management issues.

  • Estuaries Discovery Kit
    The Estuaries Discovery Kit discusses: how estuaries are classified by their geology and water circulation patterns, the various ecosystem services estuaries perform, how organisms have adapted to the unique environmental conditions found in estuaries, the many disturbances that estuaries face from nature and human activities, and finally, the essential work that the National Estuarine Research Reserve System and its many partners conduct to monitor, preserve, and restore estuarine ecosystems throughout the United States.

  • The Groundwater Foundation
    Educating and motivating people to care for and about groundwater. The site includes activities for teachers and students.

  • Teaching Resources - Water
    EPA links

  • 6th grade science resources
    Provides sixth grade teachers with the most relevant resources to meet the new Standards of Learning.

  • Air & Waste Management
    Lessons for air, water and landfills

Solid Waste Management (Litter and Recycling)

  • EE Week Library
    According to the National Recycling Coalition, recycling saves enough energy each year to provide electricity for the homes of over 17.8 million Americans.  It is one of the easiest ways to conserve natural resources and slow climate change.

    National Environmental Education Week has just added dozens of standards-based recycling curricula to their growing online curricula library.  Click here to access the EE Week Library.  Additional information on funding resources, professional development, and new EE programs are available below.

    As always, remember to register your EE activities for National Environmental Education Week, April 13-19, 2008.  Click here to register today.

  • Waste Management Jeopardy

  • Ecological Footprint Jeopardy

  • Students Guide to Composting
    Composting in the Classroom: Scientific Inquiry for High School Students, by Nancy Trautmann and Marianne Krasny, is a comprehensive guide for teachers interested in guiding composting research projects by high school students. Visit http://compost.css.cornell.edu/CIC.html to download guide in PDF format.

  • Stash the Trash
    An interactive group game that stimulates impacts of litter pollution on a sampling of marine wildlife

  • Rigsby
    Activity book

  • Graffiti Hurts Teacher Resources Guide
    A community education program from Keep America Beautiful

  • Educator's Guide to Planning a Field Day Event
    An innovative, easy and fun way to incorporate environmental learning, creative thinking and physical education in an SOL-based one-day event.

  • Pollution Solutions
    Pollution Solutions is a curriculum supplement about litter and pollution prevention based on the Standards of Learning for grades K-12. It was developed by the Virginia Resource Use Education Council and funded by the Litter Control and Recycling Fund.

  • Air & Waste Management
    Lessons for air, water and landfills

Energy

  • Free Energy Lesson Plans & Activities
    The U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy offers 350 downloadable lessons and activities on energy efficiency and renewable energy, organized by grade level and topic.

  • EnergyTeachers.org
    A network of educators sharing ideas for teaching about energy production and use as well as an online community for educators to share ideas about energy-related curriculum, including topics about the environmental impact of energy production and use.

  • Classroom Energy
    Energy Resources for the classroom.

  • Energy Resources for Kids 

Other

  • 2007 Love-a-Tree
    The packet includes a teacher resource guide complete with lesson plans and activities on land conservation in Virginia. If you would like to receive this year's kit, please contact Stephanie Feaser. If you have questions regarding the content, please contact Kris Jarvis.

  • Operation: Monster Storms
    From The JASON Project, this free and online curriculum is designed to teach students (grades 5-8) how powerful storms form and how advanced technology is used to better understand and forecast weather. The five- to nine-week core science unit covers key middle school National Science Education Standards, and can be aligned to state standards.

  • What IS an Ecological Footprint
    Lesson plans and activities for Elementary and Middle School

  • American Museum of Natural History Ology website
    OLogy, the Museum's Web site www.ology.amnh.org for kids ages seven through twelve, is based on the premise that "everyone wants to know something," and is designed as a place for kids to explore, ask questions, get answers, meet OLogists, play games, and see what other kids are interested in. With age-appropriate content in archaeology, astronomy, biodiversity, genetics, marine biology, paleontology, and physical science, OLogy makes science learning rich and engaging. Educators can find suggestions and tips on how to use the Web site in the Educator's Guide at www.amnh.org/education/resources/ology

  • Soil-Net
    Soil-Net.com is an educational resources about soil, with extensive teacher aids supporting many curriculum-based interactive student activities.

  • Sixth Grade Science Resources

  • Education for Sustainable Development
    K-12 Lessons Based on Virginia's Standards of Learning

  • Virginia's Natural Resources Education Guide
    Information, activities and resources for elementary teachers. Subjects include Air, Agriculutre, Chesapeake Bay, Forests, Minerals & Energy, Soil, Water and Wildlife. You'll find great background information, illustrative graphics and engaging activities for students in Kindergarten through sixth grade.

  • EE Link
    The site contains Internet environmental based school projects, classroom activities including many lesson plans, environmental facts and data from many sources, curriculum directory guides, organization and audio visual catalogs, software, conference and workshop announcements, higher education links, facts, grants, literature pointers, regional information, and pointers to other environmental sites.

  • Good Character, Good Stewards: Caring for the World Around Us
    Shenandoah National Park is pleased to announce the release of a new curriculum supplement for elementary school teachers in Virginia. Good Character, Good Stewards: Caring for the World Around Us is designed to help teachers integrate character education with science, math, history, and English. 

  • Object Lessons® Examining Mammals Kit
    Looking for a standards-based classroom unit that provides students in grades 5 – 8 with hands-on opportunities to learn more about mammals and the inquiry process at the same time? The Object Lessons® Examining Mammals kit challenges students to discover the identities of five mystery mammals by studying their skulls, teeth, fur, feet, tracks, and scat. Along the way, they handle real coyote and squirrel skulls, discover how teeth and scat can tell the story of what a mammal eats, and learn to read animal tracks.

    Students examine the component parts of each animal, make close observations, collect and analyze data, formulate hypotheses, and by reasoning from the evidence, come to conclusions about the identities of the five mammals.

    The Examining Mammals kit, developed with funding from the NSF, has been highly regarded by teachers and students who use it. Susan Nablo, Asst. Supt. of the Lockport City Schools in New York State, values “the practical aspect of having kids literally dig into science and become engaged in learning. It creates powerful connections for students."

    Check out Examining Mammals: review the kit materials in detail, read a sample lesson, and learn more by going to www.firsthandlearning.com/catalog/catalog_frameset.html

  • Enhanced Scope & Sequence
    The Grade 5 Science and Biology Enhanced Scope & Sequence is now posted at www.doe.virginia.gov/VDOE/EnhancedSandS/science.shtml. Please remember that these documents are meant to be another resource for teachers, and not a comprehensive science curriculum at any grade level.

  • Science and Society: Putting Agricultural Biotechnology in Perspective
    Developed for grade 6-12 students, this integrated series of web-based lessons overviews agricultural biotechnology and its social, environmental and economic impacts around the world. Corresponding Virginia Standards of Learning accompany every chapter, and analytical opportunities are numerous throughout the pages. Students can learn directly from the web pages.  A separate section for teachers lists SOLs by subject and chapter, previews each unit, and offers all of the learning materials in the student area as downloadable files. 

  • Marl Creek Environmental Education Activities
    The Marl Creek Trail Interpretive site www.teacherbridge.org/public/projects/forested/marlcreek/Home  has resources and supplies for many environmental education activities. These activities are geared toward 4th graders but can be adapted to meet your needs. The trail's interpretative signs have key terms highlighted that correspond to 4th grade SOL's. There are general activity boxes with materials to enhance or help you plan your lesson. There are also game boxes with all the equipment and instructions necessary to introduce environmental topics through fun-filled, action-packed games. Plan your own day or have a planned program day coordinated by Sandy Greene, Environmental Education Coordinator, Headwaters Soil and Water Conservation District.
    www.teacherbridge.org/public/projects/forested/marlcreek/Activities

  • Field Day Guide
    An innovative, easy and fun way to incorporate environmental learning, creative thinking and physical education in an SOL-based one-day event.

Additional resources

Lexus Launches Environmental Education Program
Lexus has announced the launch of the Lexus Environmental Challenge, a program designed to educate and empower students to take action to improve the environment. This all-new program encourages middle and high school students nationwide to develop and implement environmental programs that positively impact their communities. More than $1 million in scholarships and grants will be awarded to students, teachers, and schools. Lexus has joined with Scholastic, Inc. to create the program.

The Lexus Environmental Challenge has two distinct elements: standards-based supplementary educational materials and a contest to reward environmental action. The educational materials encourage teachers to integrate creative lesson plans into their classrooms to help teach students about the environment. The contest helps young people apply what they've learned in class through the program and empowers them to make improvements in their community by participating in any of the four environmental team challenges.

The Lexus Environmental Challenge launched in mid-September and concludes with the announcement of the finalist and grand-prize-winning teams on Earth Day, April 22, 2008. Middle and high school teams comprised of 5-10 students and one teacher advisor are invited to participate in four initial challenges, each addressing a different environmental element: land, water, air, and climate. For each of the challenges, teams will define an environmental issue that is important to them, develop an action plan to address the issue, implement the plan, and report on the results. In addition to submitting their entry online via a specially designed template, the teams will also be encouraged to provide visual documentation, including digital photos, videos, websites, and PowerPoint presentations.

Environmental Literacy & Environmental Education Defined
(mouse-over "Education & Environmental Literacy" to view all four sections)
The Environmental Education and Training Partnership (EETAP) has developed these understandable and explainable descriptions of "Environmental Literacy" and "Environmental Education" to make it easier for the field to explain and how these terms are directly connected with people’s lives. Included with the descriptions are examples of what environmental literacy looks like, how EE and educational achievement are linked, EE "done right," and links to additional resources.
Comments or suggestions? Contact: gmedina@niagaradsl.com

Virtual Island
This virtual earth-science island, offered by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), offers site visitors the opportunity to experience several earth-science phenomena while learning about the cutting-edge science that NOAA conducts regularly.

Tox Town
Tox Town helps high-school students and teachers learn about environmental health concerns and toxic chemicals pictured in an imaginary town.

Outdoor Classrooms
An outdoor classroom, also sometimes referred to as a schoolyard habitat or community restoration project, is a space set aside for the development of natural habitats in which students and community members can learn about science and the outdoors through a hands on experience.

Virginia Waters Magazine
Produced by the Department of Environmental Quality and the Museum of Natural History, learn about Virginia's water resources.

Va Association for SWCD List of Educators by County/City

Earth Portal
Looking for environmental news, science-based information, and debate? Earth Portal is a new expert-driven Web site with three main components: Encyclopedia of Earth, EarthForum, and EarthNews.

The Forest History Society has made their third edition of Education News available and it is filled with lots of EE lesson plan ideas for National EE Week, April 15-21, 2007. For more information please read the attached Ed Newsletter or check out this link: www.foresthistory.org/Education/Newsletter/EdNews3.htm.

National Board Certification
GlaxoSmithKline and the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards (NBPTS) have announced a $1 million endowment to support science teachers pursuing National Board Certification. This initiative promises to bolster the quality of science education in America's schools by providing financial assistance to science teachers who choose to obtain National Board Certification. The GlaxoSmithKline Endowed Scholarship Fund for Science Candidates will provide funds for approximately 50 science teachers each year who pursue National Board Certification. The endowment expands nationwide a program that has already supported science teachers in Pennsylvania and North Carolina seeking this credential. Since 2001, more than 5,000 math and science teachers have joined the ranks of National Board Certified Teachers. One out of every 10 teachers who hold National Board Certification teaches math or science.

National Board Certification is a teacher-driven, voluntary process established by NBPTS. It is achieved through a rigorous, performance- based assessment that typically takes one to three years to complete and measures what accomplished teachers should know and be able to do. As part of the process, teachers build a portfolio that includes student work samples, assignments, videotapes, and a thorough analysis of their classroom teaching. Additionally, teachers are assessed on their knowledge of the subjects they teach. The cumulative total of National Board Certified Teachers stands at 55,306. The number of National Board Certified Teachers has more than tripled in the past five years. For more information about GSK scholarship opportunities, visit www.nbpts.org/scholarshipinfo .

Project Learning Tree (PLT)
In response to the growing interest in encouraging children to get outside, PLT has launched a national initiativeEvery Student Learns Outside™ and website www.learnoutside.org to help educators make outdoor experiences part of their everyday lesson plans.

To access PLT’s Branch EE Newsletter visit www.plt.org/cms/pages/36_124_110.html

Augusta Springs Wetlands
Welcome to Augusta Springs! We are an electronic commons created for volunteers and visitors to Augusta Springs, a popular U.S. Forest Service wetlands and conservation education center on the North River Ranger District, George Washington National Forest. The purpose of this site is to help students of all ages learn about the role that forests, particularly the National Forests, play in protecting and enhancing our most precious resource- clean water.

National Wildlife Federation® Educator E-Newsletter
This monthly e-newsletter is designed to provide educators with hands-on activities, new ideas, resources, and strategies for getting kids outside to learn about the wonders of the natural world.  Each newsletter also includes a link to download the latest Ranger Rick® Educator Guide.

Global Warming 101 Begins Next Expedition
This February, Will Steger and his expedition team on Inuit hunters, explorers, and educators will embark on a four-month expedition to get a first-hand look at how global warming is impacting the Artic landscape, wildlife, and human communities. The Global Warming 101 expedition will publicize this change using photo, audio, and text updates they collect and post to the website. Students and teachers around the country can follow along with the Expedition using the freely available educational curricula. www.globalwarming101.com/content/view/32/88888907/

If Trees Could Talk FREE Online Curriculum
www.foresthistory.org/Education/Curriculum
Forest History Society (FHS).  FHS is a 501(c)3 nonprofit educational institution that links the past to the future by identifying, collecting, preserving, interpreting, and disseminating information on the history of interactions between people, forests, and their related resources -- timber, water, soil, forage, fish and wildlife, recreation, and scenic or spiritual values. It is designed for middle school students; however, has been useful at the high school level.This curriculum is correlated to National History and Social Studies Standards, as well as several individual state standards including Virginia. 

Outstanding Science Trade Books for Students K-12
The books that appear in these lists were selected by a book review panel appointed by the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) and assembled in cooperation with the Children's Book Council (CBC).

What’s Your Earth Gauge™?
This is the first in a series of Earth Gauge™ weather-environment tips from the National Environmental Education & Training Foundation (NEETF). Learn more about the program and browse Earth Gauge information for cities across the U.S. at www.earthgauge.net

Environmental Literacy Council offers the following resources:

Science in the News: Climate Change
Weather is the condition of the atmosphere at a particular place and time such as on a single day, or for a single week. Climate, by contrast, refers to trends in weather over a longer period of time, such as 30 years. As one old saying puts it, "Climate is what you expect, weather is what you get." Learn more about the role of greenhouse gases in climate change, the Kyoto Protocol, and whether the rapid climate changes like those in The Day After Tomorrow could actually happen at: www.enviroliteracy.org/subcategory.php/8.html

Animals of the Artic: Polar Bears & Arctic Fox
Use our Creature Features on Polar Bears and the Arctic Fox to introduce students to the human impacts on the Arctic ecosystem. Our essays examine how climate change is affecting polar bear habitat, link you to photo galleries of the animals, and list polar bear tracking resources you can use in the classroom. For more, see: www.enviroliteracy.org/category.php?id=20

Biomes: Tundra
One way of understanding differences in the ecological makeup of the earth's surface is to divide it into biomes. Biomes are regions of similar climate, soil, and vegetation that support the same types of organisms no matter where they are located on the planet. Climate is the most influential factor because it largely influences which organisms may live in a given area. See our page on Tundra biomes for more about the unique characteristics defining the Arctic region: www.enviroliteracy.org/subcategory.php/294.html

Case Study: Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
The U.S. Geological Survey estimates that there are significant reservoirs of economically recoverable oil and gas buried beneath Alaska's northern coastal plain. The locals want the economic benefits that come from developing such a lucrative resource. However, legislation prohibits oil and gas development in the 19 million acres of nearly pristine wilderness of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The intersection of economics and conservation makes an interesting case study for students to debate. Access the best sites for their research at: www.enviroliteracy.org/subcategory.php/150.html

Teaching Resources: Climate Basic Concepts
Looking for a glossary of climate terms? We've created short descriptions of basic concepts such as albedo, the greenhouse effect, and the structure of the atmosphere at: www.enviroliteracy.org/subcategory.php/177.html

Teaching Resources: Labs on Climate Change
Developed by an experienced team of environmental science educators, our Coastal Resources Debate Activity can easily be modified to incorporate Arctic themes by changing the listed resources. Access the activity and rubric at: www.enviroliteracy.org/subcategory.php/243.html

For a listing of great labs and activities related to climate see: http://www.enviroliteracy.org/article.php/248.html

Wild About Math
Produced by the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, this 72 page book uses data from several of its wildlife research projects.

Classroom Earth
Top 10 lists of environmental educational programs

Elementary Science Resource: Children's Environmental Literature

Exploring the Real Thing: A Guide to Educational Programs at National Park Sites in Virginia

Keep an Eye on Acrobatic Squirrels
Now that the leaves are off the trees, the antics of squirrels are easier to see. Active by day and well adapted to living in the midst of humans, squirrels are great mammals to observe. They offer lots of interesting behaviors for study. What are the squirrels in your neighborhood doing today? Use First Hand Learning’s short video clip of “squirrel gymnastics” to begin observing right now!

Download a free MINI-JOURNAL and you too will be off and running. This compact notebook motivates students to write and draw what they see.

Check out the other mini journals that offer “A Firsthand Look at…” and view some video clips of animal behavior to help jumpstart the process of documenting aspects of the natural world.

Go Batty
Are you interested in enriching your local habitat to make it more welcoming to wildlife? Here’s an idea from the National Wildlife Federation that will help out the only mammal that truly flies: the bat.

Bats don’t always live in caves. In spring they look for sheltering spaces where they can rear their young. You can help a bat find a suitable nesting site by building a “bat house.” Use the instructions provided online from the Backyard Wildlife Habitat pages of the NWF website and make your school or back yard more hospitable to wildlife.

WaterCenter.net
Experiments & demos

WaterCenter.org
Hands-On Water Projects make learning science fun.

Blue Zones
Blue Zones Expedition is exploring the four parts of the world, called Blue Zones, where people live the longest, healthiest lives. Our mission is to unlock the secrets and help people put them to work in their own lives. Join us here to discover ways to reach your own personal Blue Zones of longevity.

Green Teacher
Green Teacher is a magazine by and for educators to enhance environmental and global education across the curriculum at all grade levels.

EPA High School Environmental Center
This site will inform you about environmental issues and help you protect the environment.

4-H Virtual Forest
This is an interactive, web-based learning experience that introduces forest management concepts to Virginia's youth aged 9 through 13. Seven learning modules cover the following subjects: human impact on the ecosystem (sprawl), renewable resources, photosynthesis, tree identification, succession, tree measurements, and timber harvesting. The modules complement 4-H natural resource projects and events and are consistent with the Standards of Learning for Virginia public schools. 4-H Virtual Forest also includes user's guides, student activity sheets, teacher answer sheets, additional resources, and SOL links for each module. Virtual Forest is also available on CD. Contact your county Extension Agent for copies.

Commonwealth of Knowledge, is where you can search the SOLs by keyword or by content area and grade. You'll see lesson plans submitted by other teachers which have been approved for recertification points. You can "talk" to other teachers in the discussion forum and share your ideas.

Calendar of Events
A listing of educational seminars, river and wetlands clean-ups, oyster gardening events, canoe trips and so much more. Maybe there's a field trip for your class!

Virginia Naturally School Recognition Program is a way to recognize schools for their efforts in promoting environmental awareness and stewardship. Schools can apply for the three-tiered program to receive Virginia Naturally flags, pennants and wonderful resources for environmental education like bird boxes, field trips, speakers or monitoring equipment. Check out the thirty-two Virginia Naturally Schools that have won so far!

The Virginia Education Network
This is your link to all education related resources within state government. You can search for museums and libraries. Or if you're looking for something specific to Preschool, K-12, higher Education or Adult Education you're bound to find it here.

Great links for student projects:!

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