Lesson Plan On Water
Lesson Plan On Water
Standards Established Goals: This lesson presents an overview of how water is an essential resource for life. Since water is the fundamental building block of life, students will analyze the different ways they use water, what measures they could take in order to conserve it and the problems that could arise when clean water is lacking in communities. National Council for Social Studies Standards: II. Time, Continuity and Change III. Peoples, Places and Environments V. Individuals, Groups and Institutions IX. Global Connections V. Civic Ideals and Practices Transferable Concepts/Links: Human Rights, Human Geography Developing World, Survival Public Health, International Cooperation Social Problems, Humanitarian Agencies NGOs (non-governmental organizations) Students will be able to: Identify ways they use water Examine the dire consequences when communities lack clean water and sanitation Develop a plan of action in their lives and communities to conserve water Course Connections: Global Studies Current Events Geography History Social Studies
Students will know: The importance of water The different ways people use water everyday in their lives The names of humanitarian organizations that assist communities with unsanitary water conditions How to get involved in helping communities that lack clean water
Materials: DVD of Diary of Jay-Z: Water for Life or internet connection to download the documentary
Learning Activities Overview and Background: The worlds water crisis has many faces. A girl in Africa walks three miles before school to fetch water from a distant well. A teenage boy in China is afflicted with terrible skin lesions because his village well is contaminated with arsenic. Impoverished slum dwellers in Angola draw drinking water from the local river where their sewage is dumped. Farmers on the lower reaches of the Colorado River struggle because water has been diverted to cities like Las Vegas and Los Angeles. Share these facts with your students: According to the United Nations, every day 4,500 children under the age of 5 die around the world, having fallen sick because of unclean water and sanitation. Five times as many children die each year of diarrhea as of HIV/AIDS. A third of the worlds population is enduring some form of water scarcity. One in every six human beings has no access to clean water within a kilometer of their homes. Half of all people in developing countries have no access to proper sanitation. Water is critical for life and for livelihoods. Billions of people suffer from disease, poverty and a lack of dignity and opportunity because they have no access to this basic resource. Why is this so? Access to water is mainly a crisis for the poor. More than two-thirds of those without clean water survive on less than $2 a day. Either poor people are excluded because of a lack of legal rights to claim adequate water, or they fall outside the scope of limited water infrastructure that serves largely the rich. The problem of water provision severely affects slums and shantytowns. Over the next few years a majority of the worlds population will live in cities for the first time in human history. In large parts of Africa, more than 60 percent of city dwellers are in fact slum dwellers. For many of them, water comes not from faucets inside their shacks but from water tankers or standpipes, neither of which is reliable as a water source. Open sewers increase the risk of water-borne diseases.
Girls drop out of school either because they have to help fetch water or because there arent adequate sanitary facilities in school toilets. Millions of school days are lost as a result. Water scarcity affects some parts of the world more than others. Today, 800 million people live under a threshold of water stress. As rivers dry up, lakes shrink and groundwater reserves get depleted, that figure will rise to 3 billion in 2025, especially in parts of Asia and Africa. There is an urgent need to reduce waste and invest in infrastructure to harvest rainwater or increase storage. Most water use is in agriculture. Farming uses up to 70 times more water than is used for cooking and washing. Many countries have to import more than half their food needs because they do not have enough water to grow more food. If we do not change the way we use water, the amount needed for a rapidly growing world population will double in the next 50 years. Corruption makes responding to the problem of scarcity more difficult. Up to 40 percent of water is lost to water leakages in pipes and canals, one of the main causes of which is illegal tapping. The increase in the cost of water, as a result, affects the poor more than others. But the water crisis hits cities in the rich world as well Houston and Sydney, for example, are using more water than is replenished. Australia is the worlds driest continent, where increasing salinity in water is threatening agriculture. Large parts of Europe are affected by recurring droughts. Global warming is another threat. It will be responsible for declining rainfall in some regions, glacial melt in others, and rising sea levels. Other natural disasters occur with more sudden intensity. The floods that affect the Yangtze River in China every year, the hurricane that devastated New Orleans or the 2004 tsunami in the Indian Ocean that killed more than 200,000 people are all examples of the threats that natural events continue to pose for millions around the world.
water. During the war millions of people fled the country side to seek refuge in the capital city of Luanda. The infrastructure of Luanda was not built to support such an of influx people. Currently, 90 percent of the citys population lives in overcrowded slums without access to clean water, sanitation, drainage and waste disposal. Half of slum dwellers have an outdoor latrine and only one in six Luandan households has running water. 5. Arunabha Ghosh talks about the loss of dignity when one is forced to bathe in public. What does he mean? Access to safe, hygienic and private bathing facilities is a human right. When villages and homes dont have running water, bathrooms and washing facilities people are forced to bathe with only a little water and usually in public. Peoples dignity is compromised when they are denied privacy. Inadequate access to private facilities is a source of shame, physical discomfort and insecurity.
http://www.unep.org/ceh/ch03.html The contamination of freshwater limits the ability of a region to develop. Water deficiency in a region means the region can support fewer people. Similarly, water depletion means that more people must share smaller amounts of water. If a disease or contaminant is present, the effects will quickly spread throughout the population because they all drink from the same reserves. In addition, as wildlife in lakes and rivers decline due to pollution, communities that rely on fishing or hunting suffer. Ultimately, sustainable development depends on the maintenance of adequate freshwater sources.
CRITICAL THINKING
How can conflict arise from multiple states sharing a single water source? How can these conflicts be resolved?
people about the importance of water, sanitation and healthy hygiene behaviours. How might the knowledge and skills students learn in school WASH help their communities at large? UNICEF supports youth participation in water, sanitation and hygiene education as a strategy toward meeting the Millennium Development Goals because it is a unique and powerful means, not only to strengthen the knowledge, attitudes and practices of the children who are involved in the activities, but also to provide valuable advocacy, monitoring and support toward sustainable and healthy behavior change of families and communities at large. Young people like Bella and her friends often lead their families and communities to lead healthier and more productive lives. Think about all the time that is saved (which was formerly taken by carrying water) when girls like Bella have access to water at home and at school. Now these girls have more time to do their school work and their mother's can work for wages to further support the family.
Water shortage and water contamination increase health risks around the globe. It is estimated that at any given time, half of the people in developing countries are afflicted by diseases caused by organisms that breed in water and food.i Improperly running water systems can breed disease-carrying micro-organisms or insects that live in still water. As demand for the use of freshwater resources rises, the cost of freshwater rises, as well. This increases the possibility of conflict arising over shared water sources. In addition, as the cost of freshwater increases, so do food prices, leaving a poor population with even greater hardship. Economically, a lack of freshwater has serious consequences, and can limit a countrys development. The contamination of water sources also contributes to ecological concerns. Polluted bodies of water may undergo drastic changes in temperature, acidity levels and transparency, all of which alter the environment for underwater life. In places where people rely on fish and underwater plants to eat, this pollution affects the supply of food. In addition to the effects of contamination, the shortage of water resources alters important hydrological cycles, or water cycles (the series of effects water has on the earths surface and atmosphere), which in turn affects climate conditions. Thus, the availability of freshwater depends not only on conservation, but also on proper resourcemanagement, sound sanitation techniques and responsible economic guidelines.
http://www.un.org/esa/sustdev/documents/agenda21/english/agenda21chapter18.htm
Throughout the 1980s and 1990s the international debate on water resources focused only on regional shortages. The International Conference on Water and the Environment (ICWE) held in Dublin, Ireland in 1992 and Agenda 21, adopted that same year in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, both proposed a wider-reaching, more integrated plan than any considered before. The plans dealt with improving sanitation worldwide, analyzing the impact of climate change and global warming on water levels, and offering states courses of action to ensure the future maintenance of freshwater. Water is increasingly recognized as a finite and vulnerable resource and one which is
likely to be the principal constraint on development in some countries, explained a 1997 report from the Secretary-General. Freshwater resources will be a development issue, a political issue, and a welfare issue. The issue of protecting and properly managing freshwater resources therefore has far-reaching effects, affecting many aspects of the UNs agenda. In 2000, the countries of the world agreed on a set of development goals that they would strive to meet by 2015. These Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are central to the work of the UN, and include specific goals related to preserving freshwater resources. In 2005, the UN initiated the decade of Water for Life. The decade concludes in 2015, the same year that the MDGs are to be completed. In 2006 the United Nations Development Programme published the Human Development Report, 2006, Beyond Scarcity: Power, Poverty and the Global Water Crisis. This report frames the debate on some of the most pressing challenges facing the worlds water crisis and argues that poverty, power and inequality are at the heart of the problem.
Millennium Development Goal 7: Ensure Environmental Sustainability Reduce by half the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water Reverse loss of environmental resources (including freshwater)
CRITICAL THINKING
How can the International Community work collaboratively to help preserve, conserve and bring stability to the worlds water crisis?
Extension Activity:
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
1. Are there shortages of freshwater resources in your country? If so, what effects do these have on your nations health, economy, and development? 2. What does your country believe the international community can do to address the issue of declining freshwater resources? 3. How does your country suggest the international community pay for global water resource management programs? 4. What are the types of roles NGOs and businesses can play in the water shortage problem?
Evaluation Activity
1) Have the students keep a journal of when they use water for a week. 2) Have the students address the following questions: Why is it necessary to have water? Do they unnecessarily waste water? What are five measures they could take in order to conserve water? What can they do in order to conserve water in their communities? Ways to Get Involved UN Works for Water http://www.un.org/works/water/index.html United Nations Human Development Report 2006, Beyond Scarcity: Power, Poverty and the Global Water Crisis http://hdr.undp.org/ UN Water For Life Decade http://www.un.org/waterforlifedecade/ UNICEF and Water (Children and Water) http://www.unicef.org/wes/index.html UN Water http://www.unwater.org/flashindex.html UN Environmental Programme--Water http://www.gemswater.org/ Diary of Jay-Z: Water for Life on Overdrive http://www.mtv.com/overdrive/index.jhtml?id=1545981 Diary of Jay-Z: Water for Life Resources http://www.mtv.com/thinkmtv/features/global/water_for_life/ MTVs Break the Addiction Campaign http://www.mtv.com/thinkmtv/#/thinkmtv/environment/
PlayPumps International http://www.playpumps.org The UN Works Programme develops co-branded media and educational outreach and online resources that put a human face on the worlds most critical global issues. Initiatives have included a two year partnership with Discovery Communications Inc and UNESCO which highlighted cultural diversity; television and web based educational content with Animal Planet which focused on endangered species and a 10-part television series, Whats Going On? for Showtime Networks that explored the lives of young people in crisis. The documentary specials were hosted by UN Messenger for Peace Michael Douglas and UN Goodwill Ambassadors Angelina Jolie, Danny Glover and Susan Sarandon. Other celebrity hosts included Laurence Fishburne, Meg Ryan, Tim Robbins and Richard Gere. The series focused on issues such as HIV/AIDS, child labor; girls education, poverty, landmines and the plight of refugees. The series received the American Library Associations 2005 award for most notable videos for Young Adults. In 2005, the UN Works Programme traveled with MTV host Gideon Yago for a Diary documentary special on the devastation caused by the earthquake in Pakistan. www.un.org/works think MTV is a vibrant community where young people get informed, connect to each other, express themselves and take action on the issues important to them, their community and their world. With the credo "Reflect. Decide. Do." think MTV, in partnership with leading youth organizations, enables young people to get involved in important domestic and international issues - such as education, sexual health, discrimination, the environment & natural disasters, politics, and global affairs - through long-form documentaries, public service announcements, news segments, think moments, a comprehensive website and interactive forum at think.mtv.com, emerging media platforms, speaking engagements, and grassroots activities, materials and issue guides. www.think.mtv.com The United Nations Association of the USA The United Nations Association of the United States of America (UNA-USA) is a center for innovative programs to engage Americans in issues of global concern, from education and HIV/AIDS to peace, security and international law. Its educational and humanitarian campaigns, including teaching students in urban schools, clearing minefields and providing school-based support for children living in HIV/AIDS-affected communities in Africa, allow people to make a global impact at the local level. A not-for-profit organization, UNA-USA encourages United States leadership in the United Nations and is a part of the World Federation of United Nations Associations. www.unausa.org Global Classrooms UNA-USAs flagship education program, Global Classrooms, brings international issues and the Model UN experience to urban public middle and high schools across the United States and a diverse array of schools around the world. The program engages students in exploration of current world issues through interactive Model United Nations simulations and curricular materials. Global Classrooms cultivates global literacy and leadership as students explore important topics such as peacekeeping, sustainable development, human rights and globalization.
www.globalclassrooms.org References Comprehensive Assessment of the Freshwater Resources of the World, United Nations Sustainable Development. Accessed 22 August 2005, http://www.earthscape.org/r1/luj01/luj01.html 2 Johannesburg Summit 2002 Pamphlet: World Summit on Sustainable Development, October 2001, United Nations Department of Public Information. 9. 3 UN Launches International Year of Freshwater, UN News Centre, New York, 12 December 2002 http://www.un.org/apps/news/storyAr.asp?NewsID=5640&Cr=freshwater&Cr1=&Kw1= International+Year+of+Freshwater&Kw2=&Kw3= 4 Comprehensive Assessment of the Freshwater Resources of the World, United Nations Sustainable Development. Accessed 22 August 2005, http://www.earthscape.org/r1/luj01/luj01.html 5 World Water Assessment Programme: Milestones - 1972-2003, From Stockholm to Kyoto. 2001. United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), Accessed 18 October 2002, http://www.unesco.org/water/wwap/milestones/index.shtml#1977 6 Global change and sustainable development: critical trends, Commission on Sustainable Development, Accessed 8 August 2002, http://www.un.org/documents/ecosoc/cn17/1997/ecn171997-3.htm http://www.rrojasdatabank.org/trends.htm