The Carbon Cycle Game
https://nagt.org/nagt/teaching_resources/teachingmaterials/57695.html
https://nagt.org/nagt/teaching_resources/teachingmaterials/57695.html
Cheryl Manning, The National Association of Geoscience Teachers
In this activity, students develop concept maps of the carbon cycle through a die-rolling game that simulates carbon reservoirs and fluxes. By the end of this activity, students should be able to describe and explain how the carbon cycle has changed in the last 250 years.
This activity takes one 50min class period
Learn more about Teaching Climate Literacy and Energy Awareness»Grade Level
Online Readiness
Topics
Climate Literacy
This Activity builds on the following concepts of Climate Literacy.
Click a topic below for supporting information, teaching ideas, and sample activities.
Notes From Our Reviewers
The CLEAN collection is hand-picked and rigorously reviewed for scientific accuracy and classroom effectiveness.
Read what our review team had to say about this resource below or learn more about
how CLEAN reviews teaching materials
Teaching Tips | Science | Pedagogy |
Technical Details
Teaching Tips
- This activity could be adjusted to be done virtually in the event that class is online.
- This resource will engage students in movement and has the potential to include art if they decorate or color-in their carbon maps.
- If used at the middle school level, the vocabulary might need modification or scaffolding.
About the Content
- Students develop an understanding of chemical reservoirs, residence times, and the flux mechanisms required to move nutrients from one place to another.
- Students must synthesize the different chemical pathways in the Earth System and analyze how these pathways have changed since the industrial revolution.
- Students use their preexisting knowledge of different carbon sinks and sources to move through the carbon cycle before and after the industrial revolution.
- Teachers should note that the source of where the amount of gigatons for each carbon reservoir is not included so they will need to research this themselves if they need that information.
- Expert science review pending
About the Pedagogy
- The activity is engaging and well organized.
- There is a helpful teacher guide.
- Students should have a basic understanding of natural cycles, like the geologic and water cycles.
- Students develop concept maps and compare them in a paragraph or a Venn Diagram.
- A homework assignment is provided for assessment.
Technical Details/Ease of Use
- The activity provides links to classroom tools and is well organized.
- Worksheets for students to record their game progress and make concept maps are provided, and should be printed for each student ahead of time.
- The game requires at least 8 six-sided dice.