Lesson Objective: Scholars understand that studying natural disasters is important because it helps us assess risk and take preventative measures to ensure our safety.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Activity
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Make broader connections:
Accountability (Exit Ticket)
Today in class we learned about earthquakes. Earthquakes happen when there is movement in the Earth’s crust that causes the ground to shake violently. It’s important that scientists understand earthquakes because they are very dangerous. They cause destruction to houses and buildings, so knowing about them can save lives. If scientists know how earthquakes impact our surroundings, they can teach people the best way to stay safe when disaster strikes.
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars understand how proximity to a tectonic plate boundary determines the likelihood of a natural disaster occurring in a given location.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Activity
[Materials Management Tip: Give scholars whiteboard markers so they can mark up the maps. Because they are laminated, they can be easily erased!]
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Make broader connections:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) Directions: Use the reference maps to help you answer the question. You may also reference a map of the United States.
Lower Texas is not in great danger from these hazards. As seen on the map, lower Texas shows the lowest probability of earthquakes and shows no danger of volcanic hazard. This is because Texas is not located on a plate boundary. Earthquakes and volcanoes develop on plate boundaries where plates are moving toward, away from, or past each other. Because Texas is not near one of these boundaries, it is less likely to experience these activities.
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars know that every earthquake has a predictable sequence of waves: P- waves, then S waves, then surface waves. The waves travel from the focus of an earthquake, outward in all directions to the Earth’s surface.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Activity
[Tip: Consider moving the lab tables or finding a larger open space to use during this time.]
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Lab Notebook)
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars understand that the viscosity of magma affects a volcanic eruption and volcano structure formation. Viscous magma flows more slowly and can cause an immense amount of pressure to build up, leading to a violent and explosive eruption.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Mount St. Helens (WA) | Upolu Point (HI) | Mount Etna, Sicily, Italy |
---|---|---|
Image credit: All photos are courtesy of the United States Geological Survey
Experiment
[Materials Management Tip: Consider how you will organize the materials for this investigation, as there are many, and some cannot be reused by other classes.]
Discourse Debrief experiment:
Make broader connections:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) Directions: Following are images of three different types of volcanoes.
Use these images to answer the question.
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars understand that scientists measure earthquakes using standardized scales and specially designed tools. The Mercalli scale measures the shaking of an earthquake at a given location, while the Moment Magnitude and Richter scales measure the magnitude of an earthquake at its source. The energy and magnitude of an earthquake are directly proportionate to the amount of damage they cause. Areas closer to the epicenter of an earthquake can expect to receive more damage. The epicenter of an earthquake can be located by reading S-P interval graphs and using triangulation.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Note: The Richter and Moment Magnitude scale are similar but not the same.
Activity
[Tip: Display an isoseismal map as a reference for scholars while they work so they have an idea of what their finished product will look like.]
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) Below are three eyewitness accounts from three different locations of an earthquake that occurred in the United States.
Eyewitness Account |
---|
#1 – I was at the hardware store in town when I started to feel the shaking. The items on the shelves started to fall to the ground, and I immediately ran outside and noticed a crack in the side of the building! |
#2 – I was doing some organizing in my attic and I felt some shaking. I was a little concerned, but it stopped, so I moved on. Later on that night, I asked my husband if he had felt the shaking, and he said no. |
#3 – I was walking home from work, passing by the downtown area of Sacramento. All of a sudden I could barely stand, and bricks started crumbling down off buildings around me. Across the street, the bridge that spans the downtown pond even crumbled into it! |
Account Rank Evidence from Modified Mercalli Scale
#1 |
VI |
Furniture moved, cracks in walls |
#2 |
II |
Felt by people at rest/on upper floors |
#3 |
X |
Many buildings and a bridge destroyed |
Scoring Award points as follows:
Do Now
Launch
•Show the How a Seismograph Works video (1 minute and 4 seconds). Discuss:
Activity
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Exit Ticket)
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars understand that volcanoes have tremendous effects on Earth’s surface that are not exclusively negative. They also know that lava is not the only dangerous material that can escape from a volcano ash, dust, and pyroclastic flow can also present a threat to the environment and the organisms living on Earth. However, volcanic ash contains minerals that are beneficial to plants.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Activity
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Accountability (Exit Ticket)
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars understand that seismograms and S wave–P-wave graphs allow scientists to determine the epicenter of an earthquake. Areas closer to the epicenter of an earthquake receive the P-, S, and surface waves in faster succession. It is possible to locate the epicenter of an earthquake through triangulation using data from three locations.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Activity
[Tip: Because this procedure can be tricky to figure out, it’s best to have a successful group model part of their procedure during the Investigation.]
[Tip: One way to accurately determine the distance a location is from the epicenter of an earthquake while using the time–distance graph is with the index card method. Remember that it’s more important that scholars understand the meaning behind the time–distance graph; however, this is a way to supplement their use of the graph to triangulate the epicenter.]
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Accountability (Lab Notebook)
Scoring Award points as follows:
Do Now
Launch
Activity
[Parent Investment Tip Consider printing certificates of completion to send home with scholars.]
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) Directions: The following map shows an earthquake epicenter as determined by the process of triangulation. Use the map to answer the following question.
Cedar Rapids likely had the most damage because it is closest to the epicenter of the earthquake. The epicenter is where the earthquake reached Earth’s surface and where its energy was released. As the earthquake waves travel, they lose energy, so the farther away you are, the less intensity the earthquake will have. Cedar Rapids is the closest, so the waves had the most energy when hitting Cedar Rapids.
Scoring Award points as follows:
Adapted from Play-Dough Topo activity, U.S. Geological Survey
Lesson Objective: Scholars understand how topographic maps display elevation with a consistent scale. Scholars can read a topographic map and know that reading topographic maps helps scientists identify areas that might be particularly vulnerable during an earthquake (such as areas with a steep slope where debris or lava coud flow very quickly) to mitigate damage.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Activity
[Parent Investment Tip: Take photos of groups posing with their completed maps to send to families!] [Engagement Tip: Allow scholars to invent a creative name for their mountain!]
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make broader connections:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Lab Notebook)
Scoring Award points as follows:
Do Now
Launch
Activity
Discourse Debrief activity:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Exit Ticket) [Tip: Print Reference Sheet 1 on a sheet of paper separate from Exit Ticket. Scholars may be using reference sheets for the T1 Final. This Exit Ticket provides an opportunity for scholars to practice the skill of using reference sheets to answer an assessment question.]
Reference Sheet 1: The following diagram shows a topographic map of a volcano. The contour lines show the elevation of the land above sea level. Points L, M, and N represent three different locations on the volcano.
Directions: This Exit Ticket is composed of two related questions about topographic maps as a tool to study volcanoes. Use Reference Sheet 1 and your knowledge of science to answer questions 1 and 2.
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars understand that engineers work to invent, design, build, test, and refine their new ideas in an efficient way. Purposeful improvements to structures such as buildings can prevent damage and ensure human safety during natural disasters.
Materials Needed
Prep
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Experiment
Discourse Debrief experiment:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Lab Notebook)
Scoring Score scholars’ diagrams using the rubric on a 1–3 scale (below expectations through exceeding expectations). They will be able to view this feedback and revise their diagrams before you give each group a final score after day two.
Do Now
Launch
[Tip: Announce the time at which the building testing will begin. Display a countdown timer so scholars can reference it throughout the class period.]
Experiment
Discourse Debrief experiment:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Classwork)
Scoring Award points as follows:
Lesson Objective: Scholars can explain how despite the minimal level of risk, both earthquakes and volcanoes may present a danger to New York City in the future.
Materials Needed
Prep
[Tip: If there is extra time in the unit, expand this lesson into two days so scholars can spend one day gathering information and preparing for the debate, and the second day can be spent entirely on the debate and reflections on the Essential Question.]
What are scholars doing in this lesson?
Do Now
Launch
Research
Discourse Debate:
Make connections to the Essential Question:
Accountability (Lab Notebook)
I think New York City residents do need to worry about earthquakes and volcanoes.
Even though we do not normally experience powerful earthquakes here in New York City and are not particularly close to a tectonic plate boundary, we cannot predict earthquakes reliably. There is always a chance that an earthquake could be strong enough to reach New York City. The buildings in New York City aren’t always strong enough to withstand an earthquake, which could cause a lot of damage.
Volcanoes are likely a cause for greater concern. The eruption of one particularly powerful volcano (a supervolcano) could be enough to affect the entire planet! If one erupts, it could blanket the sky above New York City in ash and poisonous gases. This would kill many organisms and make it impossible for plants to complete photosynthesis, leading to mass extinctions.
Because of the reasons outlined earlier, I think New York state residents need to take earthquakes and volcanoes seriously. Volcanic eruptions and severe earthquakes may not be common occurrences here but that doesn’t mean they’re impossible. Just one could cause serious destruction to the land, buildings, and organisms here.
Scoring Award points as follows:
Vocabulary List
resources
Access a wide array of articles, webinars, and more, designed to help you help children reach their potential.
Unbe-leaf-able Organisms: Plant and Animal Needs Grade K
Educator
Curriculum
Elementary School
K
Science
Sound: Engineering a Concert Grade 1
Educator
Curriculum
Elementary School
1st
Science
Underwater World: Sustainable Ecosystems Grade 2
Educator
Curriculum
Elementary School
2nd
Science
Forces and Motion: The Racetrack Challenge Grade 3
Educator
Curriculum
Elementary School
3rd
Science
NEWSLETTER
"*" indicates required fields