Middle school and high school
Approximately 2 class periods: one for reading the Natural Inquirer inquiry and reviewing images and charts, and one for using the GLOBE resources.
The world’s forests are intricate ecosystems that play a vital role in our planet’s health. Through this activity, your students will:
Note: Have students read the opening sections of The World’s Forests 2 (pdf) to get grounded in the global importance of forests and trees.
The first inquiry in The World’s Forests 2, on pages 12 to 18, asks “What kinds of forests grow on Earth and where are they found?” Through this section, your students will learn about factors that contribute to the types of forests found in different regions of the world. Topics in this inquiry include climate, forest types, latitude, elevation, and rainfall.
The text is accompanied by many graphics, images, and charts. You will find the lesson plan for this inquiry, starting on page 50, as a useful guide. The lesson plan provides you with prompts and guiding questions to help students make comparisons, define vocabulary, and have discussions on the content.
Discover the Earth System Poster Learning Activities. These activities bring global environmental data to life, helping students connect local observations to global patterns.
First release in 2007, GLOBE’s Earth System Poster and learning activities were developed to help students understand changes to environmental factors measured locally, regionally, and globally and that connections can be observed between different environmental factors. This GLOBE resource is one of my personal favorites!
[Learn more about GLOBE’s Earth System Science Posters; the first poster used data from 1987.]
The topics in Inquiry 1 can be further explored through Activities 1 and 2 in the Earth System Poster learning activities (pdf).
My NASA Data updated the images for the Earth System Poster learning activities. They provide options for images from seven years of data (link is below).
To complete this activity, I suggest that you download images from 2013, the year closest to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization report. This will help students become familiar with the maps in Inquiry 1 and with understanding changes to global vegetation over one year.
To extend their learning even further, students can study their local ecosystem using GLOBE measurement protocols most related to Inquiry 1.
GLOBE hosts regional and global data collection campaigns on a variety of topics seasonally and throughout the year. This can be a wonderful experience for students as they participate in these collaborative campaigns to help us learn more about the Earth’s systems.
Take advantage of free GLOBE eTraining modules to master each protocol.
Visit the GLOBE Protocol eTraining page for more information about these trainings.
Celebrate your students’ hard work by contributing their research to a global database with over 30 years of environmental data. GLOBE data is collected by GLOBE students, educators, and citizen scientists. Learn more about GLOBE Data Entry.
After completing Inquiry 1, continue on to Inquiry 2 to learn about biodiversity and the world’s forests.
Acknowledgement: This material is based upon work supported by USDA Forest Service Eastern Region (Agreement no. 20-PA-11090100-026). Any opinion, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the USDA Forest Service.
This blog post is part of the GLOBE and the Natural Inquirer Crosswalk Project . Other blog posts are available on the U.S. GLOBE Teacher Resources page .
Natural Inquirer issues can be downloaded, and classroom sets of many issues can be ordered from their website. Find the complete list of issues available and instructions for ordering on the Natural Inquirer website .