Teacher guide Climate educator guide, activity 5: investments in forest carbon

TLF ID M012744

This is a teaching-learning resource containing teaching strategies and a student activity about identifying the valuable benefits, such as carbon sequestration, provided by forests. The resource has five tabs, four of which are relevant. The first tab provides information about policies and initiatives designed to protect and assign value to forests as carbon sinks, and the second provides an activity in which students identify the ways people value forests and analyse a case study about establishing a carbon market in Guatemala. The fourth tab identifies elements of the activity that can be used for assessment, while the fifth provides links to resources, including the case study, a video and a radio program.





Educational details

Educational value
  • This resource is of great value in targeting the year 10 geography content descriptions about the implications of world views for management of the environment, and the application of human-environment systems thinking to environmental change. It also contributes to students attaining the achievement standard in year 10 geography. The case study supports student discussion about the views held by community members, forestry managers and conservation groups in relation to deforestation and climate change in Guatemala. It also supports discussion about forest protection, sustainable management practices, carbon credit initiatives and the costs associated with implementing activities that reduce deforestation.
  • This resource is of substantial value in targeting the sustainability cross-curriculum priority, particularly the organising idea that the interdependence of human and ecological systems underpins sustainable patterns of living. The case study highlights the beliefs that better stewardship can be achieved by improving education services, such as training local people as forest managers, and that the ability to generate monetary value from forests through schemes such as carbon credits can help protect forests in developing nations.
  • This resource is of some value in targeting the year 10 science content description about the reliance of global systems on interactions involving the Earth's spheres. The introduction highlights the interaction between the biosphere and atmosphere in relation to the role of forests as carbon sinks for atmospheric carbon dioxide.
Year level

10

Other details

Contributors
  • Contributor
  • Name: Education Services Australia
  • Organization: Education Services Australia
  • Description: Data manager
  • Address: VIC, AUSTRALIA
  • URL: http://www.esa.edu.au/
  • Copyright Holder
  • Name: Rainforest Alliance
  • Organization: Rainforest Alliance
  • URL: http://www.rainforest-alliance.org/
  • Publisher
  • Name: Rainforest Alliance
  • Organization: Rainforest Alliance
  • Description: Publisher
  • URL: http://www.rainforest-alliance.org/
  • Resource metadata contributed by
  • Name: Education Services Australia Ltd
  • Organisation: Education Services Australia Ltd
  • Address: AUSTRALIA
  • URL: www.esa.edu.au
Access profile
  • Unknown
Learning Resource Type
  • Online
Rights
  • © Copyright 1987-2013, Rainforest Alliance. You may download, copy, use and communicate this material free of charge for non-commercial educational purposes provided you retain all acknowledgements.