Hands-on Activities

Site: DAISSy MOOC Platform
Course: CHOICE Educational Material
Book: Hands-on Activities
Printed by:
Date: Saturday, 30 November 2024, 3:30 AM

Introduction

Climate change is one of those important topics that can be hard to tackle in the classroom. Some teachers face opposition from parents, communities, or even school curriculum requirements that deny the existence or importance of climate change. But it’s vital to give kids the facts by using climate change activities that help them understand what’s taking place—and why it matters. Hands-On Climate Change Activities for Kids. Try some of these ideas with your students, accompanied with discussion about what kids can do to help keep our planet healthy for years to come.


Melting glacial ice



Background information for teachers

Climate change causes variations in both temperature and snowfall. Warming temperatures cause glaciers to melt faster than they can accumulate new ice. Warming temperatures also mean some areas will get rain, rather than snow, further lessening ice accumulation. When glaciers lose more ice in the warmer months than they gain in the colder months, they retreat or recede. 

As a glacier melts, a river or lake may form at its end. Contact with the water causes the ice to melt more quickly. It can also cause ice cliffs to calve.

Why ice melts

Changes of state always involve a transfer of energy. Ice melts when heat energy causes the frozen water molecules to move faster. When ice comes into contact with warmer air or water, it absorbs the surrounding energy (heat). The air and water molecules bump against the ice molecules and transfer some of their energy. The increased energy causes the ice molecules to break away, and the water changes state from a solid to a liquid.

Ice melts more quickly in water than air because water is denser – has a greater concentration of molecules – than air. When ice is in water, more molecules bump against it and transfer more heat energy.

Equipment required

  • Two identical plastic containers or one divided container
  • Ice cubes
  • Water (room temperature)
  • Food coloring (optional)
  • Timer or stopwatch


Teacher instructions

  1. Place an equal number of ice cubes in each container. You can use either regular ice cubes or ice cubes made with coloured water. (Coloring makes no difference to melting. It simply makes it easier to see the ice as it melts. If you use coloured ice, explain why to the students.)
  2. Add a small amount of water to one of the containers.
  3. Set the timer or stopwatch. Visit the containers every few minutes to see what is happening.
  4. While the ice is melting, view videos of glacier melting or collapses (for example, Chasing Ice, Part of Perito Moreno glacier collapses or Franz Josef timelapse retreat).

  5. Record the time it takes for the ice in each container to melt.
  6. Use the discussion/prompting questions while introducing the activity, as the ice melts and/or at its completion.

Extension ideas/prompting questions for teachers

  1. As we set up the activity, what parts are set up the same?
    The containers, the amount of ice and the temperature of the air and water.
  2. What part of the activity set-up is different?
    Room temperature water is added to one container.
  3. Why do you think we have changed this one thing (a variable)?
    To make it a fair test and to demonstrate the differing effects of air and water on ice melt.
  4. We are using the equipment to model how contact with water causes glaciers to melt more quickly. What do the different parts of the model represent – the container, the ice and water?
    Container – a part of the world. Ice – a glacier. Water – a stream, river or lake at the terminus of a glacier.
  5. What do you think will happen in each model?
    Answers will vary.
  6. Were the predictions correct?
    Answers will vary.
  7. What difference does contact with water make to either ice cubes or much larger masses of ice like glaciers and ice shelves?
    Contact with water causes ice to melt more quickly.
  8. Why does ice melt faster when it is in contact with water than with air?
    When ice comes into contact with warmer air or water, it absorbs the surrounding energy (heat). Water is denser than air, so its molecules transfer heat at a faster rate than air.
  9. What impacts do melting glaciers have for New Zealand? (Consider irrigation, tourism, hydroelectricity production and sea level rise.) As glacier ice mass declines, less melt water is available for irrigation and/or hydroelectricity production. Tourists visit glaciers, so glacier loss will impact locations like Franz Josef or Fox Glacier. Freshwater melt from glaciers and ice sheets will cause sea level rise.
  10. In the article Disappearing glaciers, it says, “Most glaciers are now out of balance with the climate system, and they would continue to retreat even if the climate remained stable.” What does this mean? Glacial lakes – like those in front of New Zealand’s Tasman and Murchison Glaciers, increase glacial ice loss. Glaciers require ice accumulation to balance ice melt. Even if the present climate remains stable, it may not be enough to slow ice loss.

Link

https://www.sciencelearn.org.nz/resources/2279-melting-glacial-ice


Topics covered

Climate change; melting glaciers;


Relevance

In this activity, students investigate the effect that contact with water has on melting ice. 

By the end of this activity, students should be able to:

  • observe that ice melts faster when in contact with water
  • discuss how the activity models the effect that contact with water has on glaciers
  • observe and discuss basic energy transfer between the air, water and ice.


Polar bear activity and the impact of melting sea ice activity


Examine the impact of melting sea ice on polar bears.

You will need:

  • low sided container
  • water and ice
  • modelling clay (or polar bear toys)

We started off by making our own sea ice. I filled a container with about an inch of water…it is so cold outside right now, I set the container on our front porch to freeze. 


Next, I made two polar bears. I used Prang DAS air hardening modelling clay (my favourite air hardening clay) to sculpt these basic bears. 


Once the ice was frozen and our polar bears were ready, we brought our sea ice inside. I slipped the ice out of the container and used a hammer to break the ice into pieces. The breaking of the ice simulates the reality polar bears face right now. As global temperatures rise, the sea ice loses its integrity and breaks into pieces. My daughter then placed the polar bears on the ice and played for a while. At this point, each bear has their own piece of ice to stand on.

 

To simulate the melting polar ice, we removed a few pieces of ice and poured in some water. Alternatively, you could increase the temperature by blowing a hot hairdryer on the ice. 


We then removed more ice we observed how the space the polar bears had to play on became smaller and smaller. As the ice shrinks, the polar bears have less space to live. Now they need to share one piece of ice. This is the reality that polar bears are facing. With the increasing temperatures, the loss of ice, the polar bears’ icy habitat is disappearing.

QUESTIONS TO ASK ABOUT MELTING SEA ICE AND POLAR BEARS

Question: Why is sea ice so important to polar bears? 
Answer: 
Polar bears need sea ice in order to survive.

Question: What do polar bears need to survive? What do polar bears eat?

Answer: Polar bears eat seals and they find seals, on the sea ice…without a diet of seals, polar bears cannot survive.

Question: Why are seals on the sea ice?

Answer: Seals have their pups on the sea ice and find their food on sea ice. Seals eat small fish and crustaceans who live on the edges of the ice. The ice melt is negatively impacting seals as well.

Question: How might less ice impact polar bears’ ability to hunt for seals?

Answer: With less sea ice comes more competition for food. As the sea ice melts and the seal population falls, polar bears will need to compete for their food and find alternative food sources. The problem is that polar bears are huge animals, who require the high-fat diet of seals in order to survive in the climate they live in.

Question: What other reason is sea ice important for polar bears?

Answer:  Sea ice is very important for female polar bears. Female polar bears create maternity dens on the sea ice. Studies have shown that pregnant polar bears have to travel further to find thick and stable ice to build their dens and have their cubs.

Question: Why is the sea ice melting?

Answer: The overall temperature of the entire world is warming ever so slightly. This is called “global warming” or “climate change”. The slightest increase in temperature is having a negative impact on the formation of sea ice, the quality of sea ice and the amount of sea ice that exists.

Question: How can we help polar bears, seals and sea ice?

Answer: We can find out more about polar bears and their habitat. We can find out more about climate change. We can find ways to have a positive impact on the world around us.  

Link

https://www.kitchencounterchronicle.com/polar-bear-activity-melting-sea-ice/


Topics covered

Climate change; Melting Sea Ice;


Relevance

To give kids the facts by using climate change activities that help them understand what’s taking place—and why it matters.