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American inventor and statesman Benjamin Franklin once remarked, "When the well's dry we know the worth of water."
Individuals, families, and policymakers face important decisions every day. No substance on earth is more precious than the water we drink. Today, with the growing awareness of the role that water plays in our society, decision-making requires more information than ever before. This project uses principles of science to examine water issues. Students work in small groups (2-3) on projects which give them the opportunity to understand water issues, collect data from remote sources, and process that data to arrive at conceptual models of how we can manage our water resources. Since the Internet, particularly the World Wide Web, provides up-to-the-minute information about our world, it is only natural that this resource be effectively utilized; hence the design of this project.
You and your teachers will work with experts from the Illinois Water Survey and the Geological Survey to identify and propose alternative solutions to solve a problem relating to water. Appropriate technology will be used to collect and analyze water data; telecomunications will also be used to gather data and for collaborative research with experts and other students; and multimedia technolgy will be used by you to report and present the process and results of your research in electronic journals. These journals will include logs, visualizations, photos and movies and will be available online as Netscape documents.
This home page is intended to serve as a starting point for your exploration of "Supplying Our Water Needs." In effect, this is "command central" for the project. Your assignments, in-class exercises, and in some cases, your project reports will be found through links from this springboard. You will also find forums (newsgroups and listservs) as well as other schools on the Web for the exchange of your information on water.
Who is Doing What on the Web?
- Web66 International WWW Schools Registry
- The Global SchoolHouse: Connecting with Other Classrooms
- Electronic Emissary Project
- Who's Doing What in Water? is a listing of UW-Extension specialists indexed by their field of expertise.
To learn more about how to make the most of your communications on the Internet, I strongly suggest that you read, Working with the Usenet Community or The Politeness Man's Guide to Netiquette.
Your assignment for the next weeks will be to investigate water issues and prepare a "storybook" about water. Your investigation should include:
Each image must have a caption. The presentation will be given using ClarisWorks® or Microsoft PowerPoint® presentation software. It should be written such that someone else could view the presentation and understand the key points without an accompanying verbal explanation.
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You will be expected to keep a log book and make journal entries in such a way that you generate your own "progress reports." Some of the greatest thinkers of all time have kept diaries, letters, journals--forms of their thinking logs--that allow us to see their thoughts and ideas in process. These primary resources are crucial in helping us to literally watch a great mind unfold or a great idea develop. Leonardo da Vinci and Alexander Graham Bell are just two figures who kept logs.
Take a look at sample pages from the notebooks of Alexander Graham Bell, Leonardo da Vinci [1], [2], [3], or Thomas Alva Edison.
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The following exercises were designed to help you understand the problem of "Supplying Our Water Needs." While these exercises are, of course, optional, you are strongly encouraged to complete them:
Great
Lakes Glossary describes major U.S. and Canadian organizations
involved in Great Lakes management, agreements and laws that affect
the Great Lakes, and terms and phrases commonly used in connection
with Great Lakes management and rehabilitation.
National
Sea Grant College Program is a network of 29 university-based
programs in coastal and Great Lakes states involving more than 300
institutions nationwide in research, education and the transfer of
technology regarding coastal, marine and Great Lakes issues.
United
States Environmental Protection Agency Water - working in
partnerships to protect and restore America's water resources
The
Great Lakes - an Environmental Atlas and Resource Book
On
April 22, 1995, Ocean
Planet opened at the Smithsonian Institution's National
Museum of Natural History. People worldwide will be able to share
the experience through this electronic online companion
exhibition.
Wetlist
provides a large collection of water-related links from the
Universities Water Information Network.
Water
Quality: 43 Areas of Concern around the Great Lakes Basin - where
the aquatic environment has been most severely affected. The
governments of Canada and the United States are working with local
communities to develop clean-up plans to restore and protect water
quality in the 43 areas.
The
National Water Quality Database is an information management tool
for locating water quality and waste management educational resources
created by the 50-State Cooperative Extension Services.
U.S.
Geological Survey Water Resources Information is the nation's
largest earth-science agency and has the principal responsibility
within the Federal government for providing hydrologic information
and for appraising the nation's water resources. Hydrologic data and
other data are used in research and hydrologic studies to describe
the quantity, quality, and location of the water resources of the
United States. The collection, analysis, and interpretation of these
data is done in cooperation with other federal, state and local
agencies, universities, and research centers.
The
U.S. Geological Survey's National
Water-Use Information Program is responsible for compiling and
disseminating the nation's water-use data. The USGS works in
cooperation with local, state, and federal environmental agencies to
collect water-use information at a site-specific level, such as the
amount of water used to produce power at a fossil-fuel
power-generation plant in Georgia.
The
University of Wisconsin-Extension Water Resources Programs
provide educational support for maintaining and protecting
Wisconsin's valuable water resources.
Great
Lakes Regional Environmental Information System is a
computer-based environmental information system providing public
access to information, data, and data utilities relevant to the Great
Lakes region.
The
Illinois State Water Survey is the primary agency in Illinois
concerned with water and atmospheric resources. Water Survey research
and service programs assess and evaluate the quantity, quality, and
use of ground, surface, and atmospheric water resources in the
state.
Exploring
ChemCom on the Internet
Internet
Resources for Environmental Journalists
U.S.
Geological Survey Weekly Water Fact
FOR
THE CLASSROOM Exploring Water Quality focuses on projects that
help students make connections among national issues, the school
disciplines, and their own communities. ![]()
Created by: Shelly Peretz from Thornridge High School in Dolton, Illinois Handbook of Engaged Learning Projects sponsored by Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Education Office and Friends of Fermilab. Funded by the Midwest Consortium for Mathematics and Science Education based at the North Central Regional Educational Laboratory (NCREL). Created: July 1,1996 ; Updated: July 26, 1996