How to Use EarthTime for Educational Geography Lessons

How to Use EarthTime for Educational Geography Lessons

Overview

EarthTime is a visual tool that maps global and regional datasets over time, useful for teaching geographic concepts, human-environment interaction, and data literacy.

Learning objectives

  • Spatial thinking: interpret maps and patterns across scales
  • Temporal analysis: compare changes over years/decades
  • Cause & effect: link environmental, social, and political drivers to observed changes
  • Data literacy: read legends, scales, and metadata; evaluate sources

Lesson ideas (with steps)

  1. Climate Change Case Study — Glacier Retreat

    • Select a glacier region and set the time slider to span several decades.
    • Ask students to note changes in glacier extent and rate of retreat.
    • Have students hypothesize causes (temperature, precipitation) and support with external data or class readings.
    • Assessment: short report linking visual evidence to climate drivers.
  2. Urban Growth and Land Use Change

    • Choose a growing city and compare imagery/land-cover layers across time.
    • Students map expansion of built areas and estimate percent change.
    • Discuss implications for infrastructure, resources, and ecosystems.
    • Assessment: create a before/after poster or slide with proposed planning recommendations.
  3. Deforestation and Conservation

    • Use forest-cover layers to track deforestation hotspots.
    • Assign groups to investigate drivers (agriculture, logging, fires) and local policies.
    • Students propose conservation strategies and model expected outcomes.
    • Assessment: group presentation with mapped evidence.
  4. Natural Hazards and Risk

    • Overlay hazard events (fires, floods, earthquakes) with population or infrastructure layers.
    • Students analyze vulnerability and suggest mitigation measures.
    • Assessment: write a brief emergency preparedness plan for a chosen community.
  5. Human Migration and Conflict

    • Visualize land-use, resource changes, or climate impacts alongside migration patterns if available.
    • Students evaluate how environmental change can influence human movement and conflict.
    • Assessment: policy memo recommending adaptation or aid strategies.

Classroom activities and assessment

  • Data journal: students keep observations, questions, and citations for each map session.
  • Map-based quiz: identify features, read legends, and explain trends.
  • Project rubric: clarity of maps, use of evidence, quality of analysis, and feasibility of recommendations.

Technical tips

  • Teach students to read legends, color scales, and time sliders.
  • Use screenshot or export features for assignments.
  • Combine EarthTime visuals with local datasets or primary sources for stronger context.

Differentiation and age adaptation

  • Elementary: focus on visual storytelling (before/after images) and simple explanations.
  • Middle school: guided questions and group work.
  • High school: independent investigations, data analysis, and policy recommendations.

Suggested lesson sequence (single 45–60 min class)

  1. Warm-up (5 min): introduce map and objectives.
  2. Demonstration (10 min): show time slider and layer selection.
  3. Guided exploration (20 min): students work in pairs on a short task.
  4. Share & discuss (7–10 min): pairs present findings.
  5. Exit ticket (3 min): one-sentence conclusion linking map evidence to cause.

Sources & further reading

  • Use reputable climate, land-use, and disaster databases to supplement lessons (e.g., scientific journals, government agencies).

Comments

Leave a Reply