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"Pennsylvania
Watersheds, Many Ways to the Sea" Lesson Plans (4)
Keywords: watersheds,
Pennsylvania watersheds, groundwater, map reading, physical properties
of water, water cycle, surface water
Prepared by: Allen D. McLaughlin, Eisenhower High School,
Russell, PA
Grade Level: ninth through twelfth grade
Total Time for Lesson: four standard class periods
Setting: classroom and computer lab
Materials Needed
- topographic maps for
your school location or photocopies of that location (one per
two students)
- photocopies of material
for activities (Activity 1,
Activity 2, Activity
2 answer key)
- Pennsylvania highway
maps ("Official Transportation and Tourism Map" often
available at local offices of state representatives)
Concepts to Be Covered
- Unique properties
of water allow for the existence of life on earth.
- Of all the water on
the earth, only a very small amount is usable freshwater.
- The water cycle is
important in the recycling and purification of water.
- In addition to the
location of surface waters, the location of groundwater has governed
the location of human settlements.
- Groundwater and surface
waters are interdependent upon each other.
- Many factors interact
with watersheds and these factors are studied when placing a value
on each watershed.
- Currently, Pennsylvania
has an abundant supply of fresh water.
- Pennsylvania's diverse
geology has resulted in many water drainage patterns.
Goals for the Lesson
- Students will be able
to define the physical components of the water cycle.
- Students will be able
to trace a molecule of water through the water cycle including
each of its three loops.
- Students will be able
to describe the purification process and the filtration process
within the water cycle.
- Students will be able
to trace the flow of infiltrate water through aquifers and into
surface waters for a typical groundwater/surface water loop.
- Students will be able
to describe why evapotranspiration demands the largest portion
of total precipitation falling on a forested watershed.
- Students will be able
to define "watershed".
- Students will become
proficient at using Internet facilities to find data which can
be used to study local environmental conditions.
- Students will be able
to list and locate the six major drainage systems in Pennsylvania.
Methods/ Teaching
Model: Direct Instruction for presentation of terminology &
concepts and for providing instruction for activities. Hands-on
Learning for both activities; Cooperative Learning for "Six
Ways to the Sea in PA" Activity
State Standards Addressed:
E & E: Watersheds and Wetlands (4.1); Renewable and Nonrenewable
Resources (4.2); Humans and the Environment (4.4)
Evaluation/Assessment
- Material presented
from overhead slides and from discussion can be assessed on subsequent
tests.
- A grade can be placed
on "Surfing Your Watershed" activity by grading the
answers and the required print-out .
- A grade can be placed
on "Six Ways to the Sea" activity.
Lesson Outline
- Day 1: Introduction,
notes, and discussion from overheads
- Day 2: Finish notes
and discussion from overheads on watersheds & PA watersheds,
and explain activities planned for next two days
- Day 3: "Surf
Your Watershed" activity
- Day 4: "Six Ways
to the Sea" activity and conclusion
Day 1: Introduction
- All life depends on
water. Plants need water for photosynthesis; plants & animals
release water as a by-products of cellular respiration; metabolic
processes need water, a biological solvent, and some organisms
can exist on the water released from this cellular respiration;
humans, like many other organisms, need additional water to remain
alive, to grow, and to reproduce.
- Living in Pennsylvania,
we are fortunate in having an abundance of fresh water.
- Worldwide, freshwater
is not distributed equally, and scarcities exist throughout the
world.
- Today, as in the past,
the locations of civilizations are dependent upon fresh water,
either from streams, rivers, and lakes, or from water pumped from
the ground.
- Expanding human populations
and associated advances in technology have been straining worldwide
freshwater supplies and shortages are starting to occur in many
locations in Pennsylvania.
- Presentation: Use
overhead slides to cover and
discuss this lesson, concentrating on the properties of water,
the water cycle, surface waters, and groundwater.
Day 2:
Presentation
- Continue using overhead
slides to cover and discuss this lesson, concentrating on watersheds
and the major drainage patterns of Pennsylvania.
- Discuss the activities
planned for the next two classes.
Day 3: Activity #1
"Surfing Your Watershed"
- Handout directions
for this activity, which includes questions to be answered while
completing the activity and explain the directions before taking
students to lab.
- One student per terminal
(for larger groups, no more than two per terminal).
- Locate EPA
"Surf Your Watershed" Web site as a group.
- After all students
have found the site, have them work at their own pace.
- If more than one watershed
exists for the zip code of your school, tell the students, in
advance, which watershed to "surf."
- Tell the students,
in advance, which location on the watershed they are to check
the stream flow.
- Students are to printout,
sign names, and turn in the watershed profile, of which they will
be needing for activity #2.
- Students are to answer
questions as they proceed through this activity and turn in answers
for those questions.
- Continually walk around
the lab to monitor their progress and to insure they remain on
this Web site.
Day 4:
Activity #2
- Handout and follow
instructions on "Six Ways
to the Sea in PA."
Conclusion
- We have studied the
unique properties of water that have allowed life on earth to
exist.
- We have studied the
water cycle and all of its components including groundwater.
- We learned of the
abundant and diverse water systems of Pennsylvania.
- We have studied our
own watershed.
- We have briefly touched
upon misuse of our freshwater.
- In future lessons,
we will study in detail this misuse of that renewable resource.
References
Nebel, Bernard J., and
Richard T. Wright (1993). Environmental Science. Englewood
Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.
Pennsylvania
Fish & Boat Commission (Spring 2000). PLAY, Pennsylvania
League of Angling Youth. Harrisburg, Pa.: Pennsylvania Fish
& Boat Commission.
Steiner, Linda. Six
Ways to the Sea. Harrisburg, Pa.:
Pennsylvania Fish & Boat Commission.
The United States Environmental
Protection Agency (2000). Surf
Your Watershed.
Adaptations/Modifications
- The "Surf Your
Watershed" activity has potential for being adapted to other
disciplines. For example, an applied chemistry class could study
the watershed for all the different elements and compounds found
in the water. Another possibility for an environmental science
activity would be to trace the sources of pollution into the watershed,
which can be found on the Web site.
- You will need to adapt
the "Six Ways to the Sea " activity for starting and
finishing at your particular school's location. I have set the
activity to travel in a clockwise direction following this route:
Rt 6 east to side trip following Rt. 44 north, Rt. 49 northeast,
Rt. 244 north, and Rt. 449 southeast back to Rt. 6 east to I-476
south to I-76 west to I-376 west to I-279 west to I-79 north to
Rt. 19 south to Rt. 97 southeast to Rt. 6 east.
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