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AP Environmental Science Syllabus Course description The AP Environmental Science course is designed to be the equivalent of a one-semester, introductory college course in environmental science. The goal of this interdisciplinary course is to provide students with the scientific principles, concepts, and methodologies required to understand the interrelationships of the natural world, to identify and analyze environmental problems both natural and human-made, to evaluate the relative risks associated with these problems, and to examine alternative solutions for resolving or preventing them. Exam Day: May 5, 2014 Prerequisites: Scheduling: Textbook: Methods: Biology, Chemistry, Physics and math through Algebra II. The class meets 5 days a week for 59 minutes per period. MWF: Lecture Days TTh: Lab Days Living in the Environment, 15th Ed., G. Tyler Miller (2007; Thompson Brooks- Cole Pubs.) Instructional methods include: lecture, discussion, debate, computer simulations, journaling, current events, independent research, field work, and hands-on laboratory investigation. Grade Determination and Scale The following represents potential grades collected during a school quarter: Classwork/Daily Work: 20% A = 90 and above Labs/Projects: 20% B = 80 - 89 Exams: 60% C = 70 - 79 F = 69 and below Foundational themes  Science is a process.  Energy conversions underlie all ecological processes.  The Earth itself is one interconnected system.  Humans alter natural systems.  Environmental problems have a cultural and social context.  Human survival depends on developing practices that will achieve sustainable systems. Long term labs and assignments  Students will develop data collecting skills over an extended period of time. This will hone their abilities to take qualitative as well as quantitative measurements. Course Outline Unit 1 Textbook Chapters 1, 2 2 3 4 3&5 4 -7 9 & 23 5 5 6 6 and 12 7 7,10, 11 8 8, 9, 9 SEMESTER EXAMS 13 10 15, 16, 17 11 14, 21 12 18 13 19, 20 14 15 22 23, 24 Unit of Study Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability, Science & Matter Life on Earth part 1 Life on Earth part 2 Evolution & Adaptation: natural selection, symbiosis, islands Climate, Biodiversity & Biomes: atmospheric/ocean currents and biogeography Aquatic Biodiveristy and Sustainability Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Sustainability Population Dynamics & Human Population Growth Food Production & Pest Control Geological and Energy Resources: mining, renewable & non-renewable energy Water & Water Pollution: global use, quality & human impacts Environmental Hazards and Human Health Air Pollution, Climate Change and Ozone Depletion Solid and Hazardous Waste Sustainability, Economics & Politics AP EXAM REVIEW & FINALS Duration 2 1/2 weeks 2 ½ weeks 4 weeks 1 ½ weeks 2 ½ weeks 2 weeks 3 weeks 3 weeks 1 week 2 weeks 3 weeks 2 ½ weeks 1 ½ week 2 weeks 2 weeks 2 week 1 week Chapter by Chapter Outline Subject to Change Unit 1: Humans and Sustainability Chapter 1 A. Learning your area  Ecological scavenger hunt (students find abiotic and biotic factors in environment) B. Personal Decision-Making (students rank their personal consumption priorities) C. Global Trends in Resource Use  Ecological Footprint Calculator D. Tragedy of the Commons & Historical Development of “Environmentalism”  Hetch-Hetchy debate (students re-enact the groundbreaking discussion) a. Hetch Hetchy Reenactment Lesson b. Restore Hetch Hetchy Website  Goldfish Activity E. Environmental Time Line Video: “The Lorax” (Dr. Seuss) Unit 2: Science, Matter & Energy Chapter 2 A. Science process skills  Check activity (inductive reasoning)  Jelly side down lab (deductive reasoning)  Soil Salinization Lab (experimental design as a science process skill) a. Soil Salinization Lab Write Up Example 1 b. Soil Salinization Write up Example 2 B. Matter & Energy C. Thermodynamics  Solar Cooker Design Competition (students design and test cooking eggs/hotdogs) a. Solar Cooking Archive (Website for Designs and Information) Unit 3: Intro to Ecology Chapter 3  Intro to Ecology  Terraqua-column lab (model of 3 interconnected ecosystems for long-term study) a. Terraqua Column Information A. Energetics  Owl Pellets, Food Webs, and Biomass Pyramids Lab (mathematical modeling of ecological data)  Energy Consumed for a Day (students determine amount of solar energy required to sustain their body for one day)  Investigation 16: Eating at a Lower Trophic Level Lab (Molnar application lab) B. Biogeochemical Cycles  Student Led Project Presentation Video: “Planet Earth” Unit 4: Evolution & Adaptation Chapter 4 A. Evolution History & Biogeography  Island Biogeography on the Canary Islands Lab B. Patterns & Evidences of Evolution C. Ecological niches  Investigation 17: Predator-Prey Simulation (Molnar) D. Natural Selection & Speciation  Tiger Fur Lab (modeling gene frequency changes in species with strong selection pressure)  Goldfish Predator and Adaptation Simulation (modeling adaptive radiation)  Evolution Flash Simulation Lab C. Island Biogeography (Explorations in Biodiversity) Video: PBS Evolution Series Unit 5: Climate, Biodiversity & Biomes Chapter 5 A. Climate  Atmospheric & Oceanic Currents B. Terrestrial Biodiversity  Climatogram Construction  Investigation 4: Formation of Deserts (Molnar Project)  Biome Research Project (student research poster) C. Aquatic Biodiversity  Oceanic Light zones  Aquatic Lifezone Project (student powerpoint project) Video: “Planet Earth” Series “The Living Sea” (IMAX) Unit 6: Aquatic Biodiversity and Sustainability Chapter 6 and 12 A. Aquatic Biodiversity – Importance and Research B. Overfishing & Non-natives  Article: A Primeval Tide of Toxins, Kenneth Weiss, Los Angeles Times, July 30, 2006 C. Managing and Protecting Marine Biodiversity D. Managing and Protecting Marine Fisheries  “Catch of The Day” (statistical analysis of global fishing trends) E. Protecting, Sustaining, and Restoring Wetlands  Case Study: Mississippi Watershed & Hurricane Katrina F. Protecting, Sustaining, and Restoring Lakes and Rivers G. Personal Seafood Inventory Unit 7: Biodiversity, Species Interactions, and Sustainability Chapter 7 A. Community Ecology  Predator Prey Dynamics a. Chi-Square Analysis Lab (statistical analysis of effect of predation on a cryptic species within a varied environment) 1. Chi-Square and M&M’s b. Wolves & Rabbits online simulation (manipulation of fecundity, survival, predation and herbivory rates to produce different outcomes) 1. Rabbits and Wolves Webgame  Community Structure & Species Interactions a. Keystone Species Research Project & Environmental Impact Statement  Succession a. Fieldwork: Kempner “Swamp” Transect Lab Chapter 10 A. Importance of Wild Species  Article Analysis: The 6th Extinction by Nile Eldridge o Website B. Species Extinction  “Back from the Brink” project (student research/species action plan) C. Extinction Threats: E.O. Wilson’s “HIPPO” D. Protecting Species: Sanctuary vs. Legal approaches Chapter 11 A. Human Impacts on Biodiversity B. Conservation Biology  Wolves of Yellowstone Project C. Public Lands in the United States  Federal Land Use Project: National Parks, National Forests, National Resource Land, National Wildlife Refuges (student travelogue & research project)  Conservation Priorities of Texas, Natural Area Preservation Association & Environmental Defense D. Managing and sustaining forests in the world and the United States  Fire Ecology Computer Simulation E. Tropical Deforestation & Sustainable Forestry F. Ecological Restoration  Case Study: Crystal Lake (land use town hall-style decision meeting) Unit 8: Population Dynamics and Human Population Growth Chapter 8 & 9 A. Intro to Population Ecology  Something’s Fishy Lab (mark/recapture population sampling)  Shannon-Weiner Diversity Index Lab (calculating diversity with real population samples) 1. Schoolyard Ecology Lab B. Population Dynamics  Population Growth Strategies Inductive Lab (identifying unknown species using long-term survivorship data)  Lesson of the Kaibab (demonstrates real life example humans affecting population dynamics and resulting crash as population exceeds carrying capacity) C. Human Population  Power of the Pyramids activity  Population Distribution and Survivorship lab (using obituary and cemetery data to model human survivorship trends) a. Investigation 22 Molnar Lab  Global Population Trends lab a. Investigation 21 Molnar Lab  Doubling Times lab a. Investigation 20 Molnar Lab D. Field Work  Cemetery (students study mortality rate) Video: “World In The Balance: The Population Paradox” (PBS: Nova) Unit 9: Food Production and Pest Control Chapter 13 A. Food Production and Nutrition  Hamburger, Fries, and a Cola Activity  Article: The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race, by Jared Diamond B. Increasing yields: irrigation, fertilization, GMO’s, The Green Revolution,  “Beefing it Up” (statistical analysis of global grain production trends)  Detecting GMO’s Using PCR Lab (investigation of transgenes in “organic” foods) C. Soil Erosion, Degradation, Conservation  Investigation 9: Soil Analysis Lab (Molnar) D. Sustainability E. Types and Uses of Pesticides F. Regulations G. Alternative Pest Controls  Integrated Pest Management  Pest Population Dynamics  Case Study: Imported Fire Ant Control in Texas Video: “Supersize Me”; “Storewars”; “The Meatrix” Unit 10: Geological and Energy Resources Chapter 15 A. Geologic Processes  Plate Tectonics (Molnar Lab) B. Geologic Hazards: Volcanoes and Earthquakes C. Minerals, The Rock Cycle, and Mining  Know your Minerals Lab  Investigating Sedimentary, Igneous and Metamorphic Rocks.  Cookie Mining Lab (geological mapping, EIS production, cost/benefit analysis) Video: “America’s Tsunami” (Discovery) Chapter 16 A. Nonrenewable Energy Resources and Net Energy B. Fossil Fuels: Petroleum Extraction and Refining; Coal; Natural Gas  Personal Energy Audit (Molnar Lab) C. Nuclear Energy  Assessing Environmental Radiation Levels a. Rosenthal Activity #28: Radiation Exposure D. Energy Calculations (significant figures, conversions) Video: “Oil On Ice” (Sierra) Chapter 17 A. Energy Efficiency: Compare Energy Resources (chart) B. Renewable Energy Sources: Solar; Water; Wind C. Alternative Energy Sources: Biomass; Geothermal; Hydrogen D. Sustainable Energy Policy E. Carbon Wedges Video: “Who Killed The Electric Car?” (Chris Paine) Unit 11: Water Resources & Pollution Chapter 14 A. Global Water Distribution and Human Usage  Personal Water Use Inventory  Global Water Use (study of aquifers) B. Role of Wetlands as Runoff Filters  Salt Marsh Model (sediment trapping and pollutant filtering lab) Chapter 21: A. Water Quality  Fieldwork: Invertebrate Water Quality Indicators  Fieldwork: Nitrate, Phosphate, Sulfate, pH, D.O., Turbidity and Fecal Coliform analysis of local stream and school drinking water B. Oil Spills & Bioremediation  Monterey Bay Land Use Debate  Oil-Eating Bacteria Lab C. Detergents & Fertilizer  Eutrophication Lab (creating algal blooms using different pollutants) D. Thermal Pollution  Effect of Temp. on Dissolved Oxygen Lab E. Groundwater Pollution  Aquifers and Aquitards Lab (geological mapping, porosity & flow analysis)  “A Grave Mistake” (forensic point-source groundwater pollution investigation) F. Liquid Waste Treatment  Urine Remediation Systems (student research project) Field Trip: Municipal Water Treatment Plant Unit 12: Toxicology Chapter 18 A. Toxicity Measurement  Serial Dilution & LD50 Lab (toxicity testing using Daphnia spp.) B. Herbicides  Student-Designed Herbicide Lab (inductive investigation of commercial pesticides, using leaf color as an indicator of plant health) C. Phthalates  Total Ion Chromatography Lab (forensic point-source pollution simulation) D. Mercury in Marine Environments  “Mad As A Hatter” Seafood Survey (analysis of Hg level trends in supermarket seafood) Video: “A Civil Action” (Touchstone Pictures) Unit 13: Air Pollution & Climate Change Chapter 19 A. Air Quality Analysis  Particulates Lab (sampling for ground-level particulates)  Ozone Detection Lab (sampling for ground-level ozone)  Air Sampling Lab (detecting gaseous pollutants using air pumps & gas tubes) B. Houston’s Air Quality  “A Tale of Two Cities” (TCEQ Ground-Level Ozone/Smog Survey 2000)  Smog City (online urban smog simulator) C. Carbon Dioxide Emission  Personal Carbon Inventory  Carbon Trading/Offset Calculation (accuracy assessment of different offset companies) Chapter 20 A. Ozone Depletion  Online Student Research Project B. Global Warming  Data Analysis Lab (ice cores & climate data investigation)  Greenhouse Effect Lab (effect of increased CO2 on temp. in covered aquarium) C. Climate Change  Student Debate (after viewing AIT & reading opposing positions) Video: “An Inconvenient Truth” (Al Gore) Unit 14: Solid Waste Management Chapter 22 A. History of U.S. Garbage  Article: “Gone Tomorrow” (investigative report by Heather Rogers)  Personal Trash Inventory (24hr collection and analysis of personal trash) B. Landfills  “Not In My Backyard” Debate (landfill location; cost-benefit analysis & debate)  Energy from Landfills (generating electrical power from Texas landfills) C. Recycling & Reclamation Field Trip: Local Waste Management Landfill Unit 15: Sustainability, Economics & Politics Chapter 23 A. City Planning  “Tomorrow: Houston 2035” (students analyze population trends and plan Houston’s future infrastructure) B. Land Use Decision Making  Dragonfly Pond (hypothetical town; students plan entire community)  Human Sustainability Chapter 24 A. Environmentally Sustainable Societies  Research Countries Achieving Sustainable Economies  Sustainability Project (students create an environmentally sustainable society) Video: “Design E2: The Economies of Sustainability” (Green architecture & city planning)