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  1. Resources

Displaying 1 - 10 of 11

Mapping Flight Lines with NASA's Operation IceBridge

Overview


NASA’s Operation IceBridge, the largest airborne survey of Earth’s polar ice, uses remote sensing techniques like LiDAR (light detection and ranging), snow- and ice-penetrating radar, high resolution digital imaging, and infrared cameras to collect information on our changing ice sheets and sea ice. Several times each year a science team and flight crew head out on month-long campaigns in

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
Middle School and Up
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Arctic SEAsons

Overview

This lesson was written for the 2012 Arctic Ocean Ecosystem Workshop and was inspired by the research work conducted off the coast of Barrow, Alaska by researchers Steve Okonnen and Patricia Yager with PolarTREC teachers Lollie Garay and Chantelle Rose. Students will engage in a series of exercises to investigate seasonal change in the Arctic ecosystem based on authentic

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
Middle School and Up
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Ocean Currents and Salinity

Overview

In part one of this two-part lesson students work in pairs to explore the effects of salinity on ocean stratification using a simple plastic shoebox-sized container in which they create a mini-ocean environment. Students will apply what they learn in the lab setting along with information gained in several online articles to a basic understanding of the Global Conveyor

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
Middle School and Up
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Adventures in Tree Coring

Overview

Coring trees is a way of learning about trees without cutting them down. When a tree is cored, the rings are examined to learn about the history and growth of a tree. In this lesson students will participate in a hands-on activity to help them investigate what information can be gained by studying and comparing tree core samples collected

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
All Aged
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Polar Profiles

Overview


Students will develop an understanding of what it takes to interview scientists, and take the corresponding data and reformat it into an electronic medium.

Objective

Students will be able to write questions to scientists in the field, interview, take the data collected, and convert to an electronic format including MP3 clips and post to the Internet.

#

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
Middle School and Up
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Technology Enhances KWL

Overview


I, Elizabeth Eubanks PolarTREC teacher 2008 – Arctic Tundra Dynamics created this lesson to introduce my students to utilizing technology to document and share what they know, want to know and have learned about polar studies and environments.

Objective


The objective of this lesson is for students to utilize recording devices (audio with or without video) and

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
n/a
All Aged
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PolarTREC Posters

In this lesson students research scientific field expeditions and learn what it is like working in the field. Students are able to ask questions of the research team as part of their project. Students then share what they have learned with their classmates.

Objective


1. Students understand what really goes on in the field during a scientific study.

2

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
Middle School and Up
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Touring the Poles

Overview


The students' task is to produce a brochure for both the Arctic and the Antarctic. These brochures will be used by the representatives of "Here We Go Travel" to advertise the virtues of traveling to both polar regions. The students will produce a 45 second radio spot that they will write and record as part of their overall

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
Middle School and Up
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Goodbye My Island

Overview


Teacher leads class through collaborative lesson. Language Arts, Social Studies and Science Book "Good-Bye My Island". Chapters of the 16 chapter book are read, summarized and taught by teams of students.

Objective

General Learning Outcomes:
Academic Achiever-by reading the assigned chapter and summarizing the important points.
Community Contributor-by giving information to the rest of the class so

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
Middle School and Up
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Asking Significant Questions

An important science skill that needs to be developed is asking significant questions that advance knowledge. This activity helps students to understand the difference between significant and trivial questions.

Objective


Students should be able to distinguish between significant questions that advance knowledge and trivial questions.

Procedure


1. Have the students define significant question and trivial questions in a

Resource Details
Lesson
Arctic
About a week
Middle School and Up
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Search Resources

Resource Type

  • Web Link (16)
  • Article (6)
  • Activity (2)
  • Event (1)
  • Informal Education Product (1)
  • (-) Lesson (11)

Region

  • Antarctic (6)
  • (-) Arctic (11)

Grade

  • Middle School and Up (9)
  • All Aged (2)

Related Members

  • Robert Harris (2)
  • Elizabeth Eubanks (1)
  • Janet Warburton (1)
  • Jillian Worssam (1)
  • Kelly McCarthy (1)
  • Lisa Seff (1)
  • Lollie Garay (1)
  • Maggie Prevenas (1)
  • Michael Wing (1)
  • Rob Wilder (1)

Expeditions

  • SEDNA Beaufort Sea Ice (2)
  • Arctic Tundra Dynamics (1)
  • Arctic Tundra Dynamics 08 (1)
  • Bering Ecosystem Study (1)
  • Bering Ecosystem Study 08 (1)
  • Nitrogen in the Arctic Ocean Ecosystem (1)
  • Oceanographic Conditions of Bowhead Whale Habitat (1)
  • Operation IceBridge Arctic (1)
  • Prehistoric Human Response to Climate Change (1)

Completion Time

  • Less than a week (24)
  • About 1 period (23)
  • Less than 1 period (20)
  • (-) About a week (10)
  • (-) n/a (1)

Topic

  • Earth Science (13)
  • Life Science (13)
  • Environmental Studies (8)
  • Archaeology and Anthropology (5)
  • Polar Careers (4)
  • Engineering (3)
  • Physical Science (3)
  • (-) Polar Science (11)
    • General Polar Science (10)

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Arctic Research Consortium of the U.S.

National Science Foundation

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This site is supported by the National Science Foundation under award 1918637.

Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this site are those of the PIs and coordinating team and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

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