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Intercom, 1982
Suggests activities focusing on the relationship between meeting human survival needs and the environment for use with junior high students in geography courses. Students learn about human survival needs, the earth's systems, and the sun's roles as an energy producer. (RM)
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Geography Instruction, Global Approach, Junior High Schools
Czarra, Fred; And Others – Intercom, 1982
Contains six lesson plans and student materials for a unit on global food distribution and the problems of world hunger for secondary social studies classes. Students study nutrition, population distribution, poverty, the causes of hunger, and economic development, and generate personal actions to solve the hunger problem. (AM)
Descriptors: Food, Global Approach, Hunger, Secondary Education
Intercom, 1985
In this simulation, secondary students explore the potentials for cooperation and conflict that have existed in relation to control of the seas. Through playing roles of decision makers of various nations, students learn about issues and positions involved in exploiting the wealth of th sea, including minerals, oil, and fish. (RM)
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Decision Making, International Cooperation, Minerals
Woods, Katherine E.; Anderson, Charlotte C. – Intercom, 1983
The lesson "Refugees and the Law: A Global Problem" sensitizes students to the problem of distinguishing between refugee and immigrant and introduces them to international law and international efforts to assist refugees. The lesson "A Quest for Status: Haitians Seeking Asylum in the United States" helps students understand…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Immigrants, International Law, Legal Education
Intercom, 1982
Suggests activities to develop junior high students' capacity for perspective consciousness considered a key to an effective study of global issues. For use in geography courses, the activities help students understand why different perspectives exist on an issue and how groups share understandings among their members through communication. (RM)
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Cultural Differences, Geography Instruction, Global Approach
Intercom, 1982
Presents three lessons which demonstrate to junior high students in geography courses that knowledge of "where things are happening" is essential to an understanding of global issues. Students use the basic tools of geography to examine population distribution, world resources, and the water crisis. (RM)
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Geography Instruction, Global Approach, Junior High Schools
Intercom, 1985
In this lesson, junior high students consider two instances of exponential population growth--one at the local community level and one at the world level--as a way of illuminating some of the problems posed by growth and the limits that may curtail it. (RM)
Descriptors: Community Size, Conflict Resolution, Decision Making, Food
Mastrude, Peggy – Intercom, 1985
This simulation helps students in grades four to eight see their planet as one environment with limited resources shared by all. Students learn that the earth is a large system comprised of small systems, that systems are interdependent and often have irreplaceable parts, and that resources are not equally divided among countries. (RM)
Descriptors: Conflict Resolution, Decision Making, Global Approach, Intermediate Grades