K-12 Lesson Plans Foraging for Fish in a Melting Arctic: the Black Guillemots' Quest to Feed Their Young Kindergarten and up. An active game inspired by a longterm scientific study of Black Guillemots nesting on an island near Barrow, AK. The game introduces the life cycle of the Black Guillemot, how it raises its young, and the adaptations it is making to adjust to life in a changing Arctic as arctic sea ice shrinks in area. Scientist PowerPoint presentation about the study. Lesson Plan (PDF, 913 KB) Scientist Presentation (PDF, 2.82 MB)
Bowhead Whale Unit Grades 1-3. Developed for students in a whaling community. It was created by a teacher whose students know the bowhead in a uniquely intimate way because of their environmental and subsistence circumstances, with the goal of approaching the acquisition of whale "knowledge" from a scientific learning perspective that will then support the environmental and subsistence knowledge that is vital to her students' way of life. Lesson Plan (PDF, 203 KB)
Arctic Smorgasbord High School. Students discover how different organisms that live in the Arctic depend on each other and what might happen to the food web if one or more organisms disappears from it. Students will build an Arctic food web. Lesson Plan (PDF, 102 KB) Arctic Food Web Cards (PDF, 650 KB)
Arctic Food Web in Language Arts High School. Students explain, both orally and in writing, a diagram used to illustrate a food web. This lesson is designed to follow a lesson in a Biology or Life Sciences class that involves the construction of a food web. It can be used as a followup to the lesson plan Arctic Smorgasbord. Lesson Plan (PDF, 99 KB)
Arctic Sea Ice Impacts on Temperature, Salinity, and Density of Sea Water Middle School and up.This lesson investigates the impact of melting and freezing arctic sea ice on the properties of salinity, temperature and density that contribute to the stratification of ocean waters. This lesson combines several learning approaches including a handson lab, a webquest and collaboration with students in Alaska and the Northeast U.S. Scientist presentation on arctic ocean processes and interactions with processes in other parts of the global ocean system. Lesson Plan (PDF, 130 KB)
These lesson plans were developed as part of the Arctic Ocean Ecosystem Workshop, held in Barrow, Alaska, on May 18?23, 2012. COSEE Alaska and its partners Alaska Sea Grant, the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, the Alaska SeaLife center, Alaska Ocean Observing System (AOOS) and the UAF Center for Crosscultural Studies collaborated with the North Slope Borough School District, the North Pacific Research Board (NPRB), and the Arctic Research Consortium of the
US (ARCUS) to engage scientists and teachers in lesson plan development. Major support was provided by the National Science Foundation.
The Best of COSEE Hands-On Activities offers ocean scientists simple, engaging, and easily accessible hands-on activities that will make your presentations to K-12 students, the public, or other non-science audiences more effective. This collection was gathered from across the COSEE Network, with each Center submitting their best hands-on activities.
Alaska state science standards and GLEs compared with national Ocean and Literacy principles completed for the Alaska Environmental Literacy Plan (AKELP).
A standards-based framework for ocean and climate change education for Alaska high schools
A series of 10 videos highlights how the Alaska Ocean Observing System 2009 field experiment was conducted to test and refine models to forecast weather, ocean conditions, and circulation patterns in Prince William Sound, Alaska. Scientists explain and demonstrate how oceanographic data is collected with drifters, gliders, and other autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs). Interviews of participating scientists (including four women) provide a resource for career exploration.
NOAA/UAF. The mission of ACCAP is to assess the socio-economic and biophysical impacts of climate variability in Alaska, make this information available to local and regional decision-makers and improve the ability of Alaskans to adapt to a changing climate.
Bettina Kaiser, Editor. Ice is featured as one of six polar themes. The book provides an excellent summary of current sea ice research and understandings and includes teacher-tested hands-on science activities.
This guide provides basic information for scientists who wish to engage in education and public outreach (EPO) activities. Engaging in EPO can be an excellent way to address funding agencies’ requirements that proponents articulate the broader societal value of their research.
COSEE Alaska Office: 1007 West Third Avenue, Suite 100 • Anchorage, AK 99501 • tel (907) 274-9612 • fax (907) 277-5242
email • Nora.Deans@nprb.org, Program Director or msigman@alaska.edu, Program Manager