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Weblinks for S&S Teachers
Shown below are several
sites that relate generally to Science and Sustainability
(S&S).
They are followed by sites related to specific parts of the
course. You can scroll down through all of the sites, or jump
directly
to sites related to a specific part of the course by clicking
on the list below. |
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Generally
Helpful Sites
The
World Factbook |
Teachers will find the information
on this site useful as a supplement to activities involving
Material World. This site allows teachers (or students) to
click on a country's name, in an alphabetical list, and access
information about geography, climate, economy, politics, population,
industry, and much more. the information available. This may
be valuable to students when studying a country in Material
World or during Activities 10 and 30. |
The
World Bank's Countries and Regions |
On this site, the World Bank provides
economic, agricultural, climatic, demographic, and societal
information about countries around the world. Students can
click on a world map to gain access to important information
about the country they are studying as part of the course. |
STELLA®
Modeling Software |
Science and
Sustainability students have opportunities to use
STELLA while studying population dynamics and types of models
in Activities 7 and 8. STELLA is produced and distributed
by High Performance Systems in Hanover, NH.
Click
here for more information on STELLA and to download NCSA
Deer Population Models for these activities. |
Education
for Sustainable Development Toolkit |
ESD Toolkit is an index of teacher resources
about sustainability that are currently used in high school
and college classrooms. Much of the information is in the
form of course descriptions and syllabi, but visitors to the
site will also find descriptions of long-term projects relating
to sustainbility (including contact information for each project). |
Tapped
In
|
Tapped In is an on-line meeting
place for teachers. It's like a chat room, bulletin board,
and SEPUP workshop all in one. SEPUP teachers can organize
meetings in the virtual SEPUP office, leave curriculum ideas
and suggestions on the bulletin board, join the SEPUP listserve,
or meet and exchange information with teachers working with
other programs around the country. You need to be a member,
but it's all free! To sign up, go to Tapped In and click on
"Steps," under "Join Us." You can also
visit the site as a guest: just click on "Guest Login"
and follow the directions from there. |
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Part 1: Living
on Earth
Life Cycle of the Fruit Fly |
This
page contains a narrative description of the fruit fly’s life
cycle. It includes detailed information for interested students
and teachers, and may be useful in identifying the flies used
in Part 1. |
Population Dynamics of the Fruit Fly |
This
page describes an activity that can be carried out as an extension
with the fruit flies used in Part 1. It provides an opportunity
for students to design an experimental procedure, using an organism
they are familiar with from lab. |
Phytoplankton
Images
|
On this site, students can see detailed
microscopic phytoplankton images as an extension or alternative
to the microscope viewing of phytoplankton in Activity 2. |
Yeast |
This
website shows a micrograph of yeast. Yeast is the fungus which
creates carbon dioxide and makes bread rise, and also causes
fermentation in the production of beer. (Yeast is introduced
as a model organism in Activities 3 and 28.) |
A Mathematical Description of Specific Heat |
This
site explains the relationship between specific heat and heat
capacity with respect to all temperature scales and the Ideal
Gas Law. This site may be appropriate as background information
for interested teachers during Activities 3-5. |
GLOBE Project Vegetation Maps |
This
website provides color coded information about vegetation for
all land on Earth. Students may find this information useful
when completing Activities 7-11.The GLOBE website also provides
information on air temperature, precipitation, soil moisture,
and other variables describing the physical and chemical nature
of the planet. |
Environmental
Protection Agency |
The
Environmental Protection Agency provides up-to-date data about
greenhouse gas concentrations and atmospheric temperatures at
this website. When students study carbon dioxide emissions as
a result of combustion, this additional information may be valuable. |
Population
Connection
(formerly Zero Population Growth)
|
Population Connection produced
the "Population
Growth" video
included in the course kit and provides other information
and resources for teaching about human population dynamics
in classrooms.
Students study population dynamics in Activities 7-9; the
topic is a fundamental concept upon which many of the later
activities
depend. |
World Population Figures
(U.S. Census Bureau) |
This
site provides the most up-to-date estimate of world population
produced by the U.S. Census Bureau. It will be useful to students
and teachers in discussions about how global population is changing
over time and projections of future population levels. |
U.S. Urban Population Figures, 1790-1990
(U.S. Census Bureau) |
This
site provides detailed demographic information about the 100
most populous urban sites in the U.S. for every census taken
from 1790 to 1990. As an extension to their production of population
curves for other animals, students can graph this data to show
population increase for various urban areas near their homes.
They can discuss the types of curves which are made and consider
environmental and other factors influencing the growth and decline
of human populations. Data at this site is organized by year,
so students will need to look at several population lists to
find the data for one geographical area over time. |
U.S. County Population Figures, 1900-1990
(U.S. Census Bureau) |
This
site provides census data for every county in the U.S. from
1900 to 1990. While fewer years are provided than on the urban
population site, students may find this site more useful:
the data is organized by county, so it is easier to find; and
since
every county in the country is included, students are likely
to find data which is relevant to them even if they don’t
live in one of the country's 100 most populated areas. |
The Medfly |
Certain
species of fruit flies are considered agricultural pests.
To explore this topic or to view a photograph of the stages
of
fruit fly development (fly, pupa, larva, eggs), visit this
site -- the Cooperative Agriculture Pest Survey and NAPIS' homepage
on the Mediterranean fruit fly, also called the medfly (Ceratitis
capitata). |
Center
for Earth Observation, Yale University |
The
Center for Earth Observation at Yale University provides references
to projects performed using Landsat images, suggestions for
using these images in the secondary school curriculum, and large
numbers of archive images in an easy-to-use format. These images
are similar to the ones that students use during the course
-- of Beijing, Garden City, and the Aral Sea in Kazahkstan --
and can be used to expand their investigations of these topics. |
Greenwire |
The
Greenwire website is updated daily with current issues affecting
environmental debates in this country and around the world.
It may be helpful to students as they pursue individual research
projects, especially during Activity 10.3. |
Chinese
Auto Industry |
This
site provides information about the number of cars, trucks,
and farm vehicles produced by various manufacturers and sold
in China. It also provides links to other information about
the automobile industry in China which may be useful to the
Car Factory Development Group during Activity 10.3. |
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Part 2: Feeding
the World
Food
and Nutrition Information Center |
This site provides information
on dietary guidelines, food composition, the food guide pyramid,
and issues such as healthy school lunches and family economics. |
SeaWiFS:
NASA's Global Ocean Color Monitoring Mission |
This site displays data collected
by NASA on global phenomena. Included are coded maps of the
globe showing sea temperature, topographic information, cloud
cover, and concentration of phytoplankton in ocean waters.
This information is similar to the data students use in investigating
the possibilities for aquaculture. |
The
Microbe Zoo |
Check out the Microbe Zoo! A site
developed through Michigan State University, it contains interesting
information and wonderful pictures of all kinds of microbes.
To find pictures quickly, choose "to see the clickable,
text-based outline" on their home page. You can demonstrate
the difference in size between protists and bacteria by choosing
"Cow Rumen Protist and Bacilli." You’ll see a scanning
electron microscope picture of the protist Diplodinium covered
by strands of bacilli bacteria. |
The
Genetics Education Center |
The University of Kansas Medical
Center has compiled an excellent list of web-based resources
on genetics. Resources include links to the Human Genome Project,
information on cloning, and descriptions of genetic disorders. |
Detoxifying
the Green Revolution |
This link provides information
about the efforts of the International Rice Research Institute
since the Green Revolution to try to develop sustainable agricultural
methods. |
Salmonella |
This site shows a micrograph of
the bacteria Salmonella, a prokaryotic single-celled organism.
It may be of interest to students to observe prokaryotic cells
as they learn about cell structure in Activity 13. |
Lactobacillus:
picture |
This is another picture
of a prokaryotic cell, a Lactobacillus bacteria. |
Lactobacillus:
description |
This site provides
a description of Lactobacillus bacteria. |
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Part 3: Using
Earth's Resources
Exploring
the Table of Isotopes |
This website provides information
on all known isotopes of any element. Just type in the chemical
symbol and mass number; the site will respond with the exact
atomic mass, the isotopic abundance in nature, physical properties
of the isotope’s atoms, and more. An excellent reference for
teachers who use the periodic table in class. Students and
teachers will find it helpful during the periodic table activities
and in the section on radiation. |
Copper
Processing Page |
The Broken Hill Proprietary Corporation
and the Copper Development Association, Inc. publish an on-line
magazine called Innovations.
In this archived issue, from July 1997, there is an article
on the use of copper to make household and automotive components. |
Kevlar |
This website, maintained by the
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, provides information on how
Kevlar is used in the space program and in the production
of bulletproof clothing, and shows diagrams of the molecular
structure of Kevlar. |
Oil
as a Finite Resource: When is Global Production Likely to
Peak? |
This paper on the World Resources
Institute website give some background on petroleum use, and
provides reasonable estimates of how petroleum use may change
in the future. Assumptions involved in each possible scenario
are clearly stated and explained. |
The
Haber Process |
The Haber process is the chemical
procedure for using a catalyst to form ammonia from nitrogen
and oxygen. This web site provides more technical information
to enrich understanding beyond what is in Activity 26 in the
Student Book. |
Kevlar
by DuPont |
On this site, DuPont, the manufacturer
of Kevlar brand fiber, describes the chemical and physical
properties, as well as the engineering applications, of this
material. (Kevlar is used in Activity 23.) This site also
provides links to other new fibers manufactured by DuPont. |
The
Polymer Macrogalleria |
This site gives abundant information
on chemical and physical characteristics of many polymeric
substances. 2-D and 3-D models of polymer synthesis reactions
are shown, and techniques for studying polymers are described. |
[top]
Part 4: Moving
the World
The
World's First Nuclear Power Plant |
This site, sponsored by the State
Research Center of the Russian Federation, describes the life
cycle of the first nuclear power plant, which is not decommissioned.
The reactor design is clearly described, as is the energy
generation capacity. Students may find this site interesting
during the investigation into the use of nuclear technologies
for energy production and the dangers presented by such power
plants. |
Radiation
Damage in DNA |
In Activity 34, students learn
about radiation and the dangers of high energy radiation from
nuclear fuels to the DNA molecule. This website shows diagrams
and presents evidence for the damage that can occur in these
situations. |
Effects
of Ionizing Radiation on DNA |
Similar to the last website, this
one describes the effects of ionizing radiation on the phosphate
ribose bonds in DNA. Specifically, double stranded breaks
(DSBs), discussed Activity 36, are explained. |
Battery
Power |
Science and Sustainability
students consider how batteries store energy and how this
affects our ability to store energy from renewable energy
sources. This website provides instructions for students and
teachers for how to make a simple battery and use it to light
an LED. |
Carbon
Monoxide Fact Sheet |
Science and Sustainability
students learn about incomplete combustion as a part of their
studies on fossil fuels and energy. This web site, from the
American Lung Association, provides information and statistics
about one of the major products of incomplete combustion and
how to avoid the dangers of the silent killer. |
Specific
Heat |
Science and Sustainability
students study specific heat and its applications for understanding
the nature of heat and thermal energy, for storing and transferring
thermal energy between materials, and in understanding phase
changes. This website provides some more information on the
history of the concept of specific heat, as well as its relationship
to the gas laws, heat capacity, and temperature. |
The
Electromagnetic Spectrum |
This page, developed at the Lawrence
Berkeley National Lab, provides a color version of the image
in the S&S Student Book illustrating the Electromagnetic
Spectrum. If possible, you may want to make a color poster
of this chart for your classroom as students discuss electromagnetic
radiation and its effects. |
Airborne
Particulate Research |
In this document, EPA scientists describe the
priorities for future research on particulate pollution. Students
may find this information helpful during Activity 36, when
they are studying particulates that are products of combustion
reactions. The report is clear and provides definitions for
many terms used in this field of research, as well as descriptions
of the most pressing concerns. |
The
Oxidizable Carbon Ratio (OCR) |
This essay describes in more detail
the use of OCR as a method for dating carbonaceous materials.
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