Knowing Your Audience

Design course materials related to student interests (hobbies, majors, student clubs, etc.) and experiences (rural life, volunteering, work).

Task Description:

Why do learners care?

Students are aware of the real effects of climate change but can often feel paralyzed as to what they can do as individuals. Seeing that they can make an individual contribution to a collective problem alleviates anxiety and empowers students to work together. In addition, students are interested in other cultures, and will be interested in learning about the role culture plays in the political, economic, and personal decisions we make that affect our earth.

 

The materials outlined here are designed specifically with the students in mind. Any number of audio/visual and reading materials can be substituted. The project length can be lengthened with additional material.

Task Type:
need to know
Task Focus:
reflection
Task Time:
Indeterminate
Task Extension:

Solicit from the students what kinds of technology they use or would like to learn to use.

Technology Tips:

Use a variety of technology that will not only engage students, but will also enhance the learning process itself. 

Potential Hurdles:

The use of technology must be seamless with the learning activities and objectives, otherwise it will hinder student learning.

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Entry Event: The Mission

This activity starts the project by having students complete a mission and to read up on background information.

Task Description:

1.     Students use GooseChase to begin their mission. Mission: “Scientists say time is running out for humans to change their behavior in order to diminish the effects of climate change. Your job is to find a solution.” Students take pictures of the form of transportation they use the most, where they recycle their waste, a recycled object they use most frequently, register and conduct the Stanford ISA Carbon Footprint survey, and show they are ready for the mission! Opening class discussion centers on the results and observations of the hunt.

2.     (During the first part of this mission, and before being divided into project groups, they are required to attend one of the many sustainability and climate change student clubs on campus and report to the class about their agendas and programs for the term.)

      This ✔ symbol indicates where students are scaffolding the project throughout the sequence of activities.

Pre-Discussion activity 1: The GooseChase and carbon footprint results are shared with the students. Scaffold and discussion of the GooseChase findings in class. The purpose is to bridge their individual habits and actions with the larger social issues of climate change.

Discussion activity: Think-pair-share: Identify the similarities and differences between students’ photographs and their carbon footprint results. What do you notice? Come up with your own Chinese definition of what is a carbon footprint. State why it is important to have as small a footprint as possible.

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
reflection
Technology Tips:

Goosechase.com is an easy to use scavenger hunt activity that students can do before the course commences. 

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Entry Event Part 2: The Issues

This activity provides students sets up the issues with background information that will get students to talk about the subject.

Task Description:

1.     Read the following English-language articles on the class webpage related to disappearing cities.

a)        What Could Disappear (NYT 4/24/2016)  sea level rise in US

b)       14 US Cities that Could Disappear Over the Next Century, Thanks to Global Warming (Huffingtonpost 8/26/2013)

3.        The following NYTimes article is written in both English and Chinese. Identify the words you think may be related to discussing climate change in the Chinese article.

a)        Rising Waters Threatens Chinese Cities (NYT 4/7/2017) 

b)        洪水围城:气候变化威胁中国大都市Rising Waters Threatens Chinese Cities (NYT 4/7/2017) 

 

Pre-Discussion activity 2: Scaffold and discussion the English readings, which help set the stage for future class discussion. Identify the relevant vocabulary students found in the Chinese version of the 3rd article. Students are provided a handout with the new words related to recycling and carbon footprint to help guide the discussion of the reading activity and to introduce a definition of climate change and some of the linguistic terms to be learned in the course.

 

Discussion activity: Think-Pair-Share: What is happening to the US and Chinese cities?

 

5.      Students produce individual presentations on their carbon footprint analysis. Think-pair-share: 1. What have you learned about yourself and your classmates through your photos and carbon footprint results? 2. What is your reaction to the articles on the future disappearance of US and Chinese cities? Describe how you yourself have witnessed climate change. Is climate change an important issue for us to tackle?

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
content

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The Causes and Effects of Climate Change

The next series of tasks familiarizes students with the science of climate change and introduces relevant vocabulary and expressions.

Task Description:

 

 

 

Activity 3: Cause and Effects of Climate Change

Students are given a handout with the term “climate change” in Chinese and asked to discuss in pairs what the expression means in their own words and provide a definition to the class. Next, they are given a series of questions if they have been influenced by climate change.

Activity 3.1: Students consult the new vocabulary words on the handout, identify the pinyin and meaning with the corresponding English translation. Some words will already be familiar. The instructor points out the new, unfamiliar words.

Pre-reading Activity 3.2: Students are provided another handout with an illustration of climate change effects in Chinese. The instructor takes students through the illustration that describes greenhouse effect.

Pre-reading Activity 3.3: Students look at a list of vocabulary that describe the effects of climate change and find their synonyms in the second column. Students are asked to describe what changes occur as a result of climate change (as in, rise in sea level, increased CO2, etc.).

Pre-reading Activity 3.4: Students look at another illustration to learn about the effects of CO2 emissions, using the word “leads to 导致.” Students work in pairs to describe the effects of greenhouse gas emissions.

Reading Activity 3.5: Students read about what human factors influence temperature rising more at night than during the day. They are asked to underline the relevant sentence to a question.

 

Pre-Reading Activity 3.6: Students look at an illustration of climate change effects (melting ice caps and glaciers, rising sea levels, etc.) as a means to learn new vocabulary and to practice the expression “to increase, rise, decrease” from Activity 3.3. They answer questions related to the diagram.

Reading and Discussion Activity 3.7: Students look at a science graph that explains the increase of thermal heat over the last 50 years and use Think-Pair-Share to answer questions, and explain what climate change is and how we can prevent it.

Independent Activity 3.8:  Students conduct a second Carbon Footprint calculation, this time in Chinese (metric measurements in Chinese provided as handout for students’ independent consultation). They self-examine their energy consumption and record discoveries about their carbon footprint. (using VoiceThread or other recording program.)

Pair Activity 3.9: Students in small groups write a definition of climate change and submit to class for consultation, comparison, correction.

Task Type:
need to know
Task Focus:
content
Task Extension:

Interview Chinese speakers on campus and in the community for their definition of climate changes causes and effects, and then present to the class.

I stress caution in over using the native speakers in the community as informants throughout the project unless the instructor has already come to an agreement with them about the role they want to play. The aim is to encourage cross-cultural communication outside of the classroom as scaffolding for lifelong learning, not information-gathering for a course. 

Technology Tips:

The climate change document is one among several possible online documents that can be used in this class. 

Voicethread.com is an easy program to operate. Students can add content to one thread, upload images, and comment on each other's thread.

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Action Against Climate Change: National

Students study and discuss public service announcements (PSA) about energy conservation.

Task Description:

Activity 4 Action Against Climate Change Public Service Announcements. Students follow a link to study mainland Chinese PSAs about energy conservation. Specific vocabulary used in these ads is included with the link. Students view Oxfam PSA on how climate change affects poorer people first.

Activity 4.1: Students present in class their favorite PSAs and state why. The class discusses the effectiveness of these ads.

Pre-Listening/Viewing Activity 4.2: Students discuss pre-modern life and human’s carbon footprint, and learn relevant vocabulary and expressions prior to viewing.

Listening/Viewing Activity 4.3: Students watch a CCTV program about how climate change affects people.

 Independent Activity 4.4: Students read about carbon footprint of wealthy Chinese households. China: Carbon dioxide footprint of wealthy households article. Then they ask their Chinese friends or classmates to conduct the brief Carbon Footprint calculator (Chinese version) and students record a discussion of their conversation about comparing and contrasting individual and national carbon footprints in the US and China. They submit these recordings for their classmates to hear and comment on in class discussion. Also, students document the results by taking screenshots.

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
interaction

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Action to Combat Climate Change: College Campus

Students study and discuss college campuses in PRC and Taiwan and compare/contrast with actions taken on their home campus.

Task Description:

Part 3 College campus actions to combat climate change

Pre-Reading/Listening Activity 4.6: Students are introduced the vocabulary by reporting on what kinds of sustainability efforts are happening on their campus, and considering what kinds of efforts they might see on other campuses in Taiwan and China based on the title of the reading and the listening activities.

Students will also have met with the sustainability officer at their college, who will talk with them about what efforts the college has taken towards combating climate change.

  1. Reading Activity and Discussion 4.7: Students use the reading app Perusall to read an article on Taiwanese college students’ environmental activities (台大学生的环保活动”) . Students can annotate the text, see each other’s annotations and highlight where they have questions. This is a slow news item "台大学生摆摊回收塑料袋换环保筷" 2nd news item (“慢速新闻汉语” 20091211 Scripts for Special Chinese) : Includes links to vocab list and audio, as well as video.
  2. Listening Activity and Discussion 4.7.1: Students watch a video on an effort by mainland Chinese students to draw awareness to climate change and what individuals can do to mitigate it. 筷子树  (video with text-first 8 lines only)

OR

Reacting Activity and Discussion (alternate): Read and listen to a report on what PRC students at different universities are doing on their campuses. (校园行动: 环保渐成中国大学生关注重点)

Post-Reading/Listening Activity 4.8: Using Venn diagram, students compare sustainability efforts on campuses and reflect on how cultural habits and traditions play a role in these efforts. Students consider the effects of the efforts if they were used in different cultures.

Post-Reading Activity 4.9: Students individually fill in a “mad lib” using the grammatical structures in the news item, yet they will use their own nouns and adjectives to have the text make sense. These are shared in class.

Small student groups inquire about additional sustainability culture on the campus or in the community. They devise a series of questions to ask Chinese students, share with the class, and ask for peer feedback. Students arrange to meet with the instructor in their separate groups to to talk about this --help revise questions, etc. 

Project groups: After completing an empathy map, determine information needed, interviews to conduct, start working on gathering data and information about the target audience and final product. Submit project for feedback and peer review.

Task Type:
need to know
Task Focus:
grammar

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What Beijing is Doing to Combat Climate Change

Students read an article on how Beijing's government is combating air pollution.

Task Description:

Pre-Reading Activity 5.0: Students use jigsaw, scaffolding and skimming to break down the reading, examining the linguistic structures to define what kind of essay it is (argumentative, persuasive, etc.) and what students expect to find (a variety of viewpoints, examples, etc.).

Reading Activity 5.1: Students read and comment on an article on Perusall regarding air pollution and what the PRC is doing to combat it. "大气污染引重视 多国合作共治理" (Global Times 11/23/2016) (includes vocab).

Post-Reading Activity 5.2.: Students use the quiz words to write a summary of the article.

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
grammar
Technology Tips:

Perusall.com is an excellent app to guide students how to do close reading, read and comment on each other's comments and questions, ask questions of the text, and measure where in the text students encounter the most difficulty or confusion.

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Data and Statistics on Energy Consumption

Students read data and statistics on China and US energy consumption to analyze the comparative difference in energy consumption per capita and land mass.

Task Description:

Pre-Listening/Viewing activity 7.0: Students work on a handout based off of information about energy consumption statistics in China and the US. to notice the comparative difference in energy consumption between China and the US per capita and per land mass. Consider the difference in population and other factors that might affect each country’s consumption habits. Write down a few ideas about this and prepare to share with a partner.

Pre-Listening/Viewing activity 7.1: Students review vocabulary for different types of energy consumption and work on a handout with exercises that reintroduce the expression “leads to” 導致 as well as “creates/brings about” 造成.

Independent activity 7.2: Students work in pairs to discuss the difference consumption habits between the two cultures, and the projected forecast for future consumption growth. What kinds of insights can you and your partner find?

 

1.     With your partner, return to the 2nd handout, pages 5 and 6 (in English) and discuss with your partner various changes in US consumption and energy reductions in household appliances (设备)Students also record themselves discussing strategies one can use individually to reduce energy consumption. Discuss how many strategies you already use, why such strategies are useful, and what you think you could do more of.

Task Type:
need to know
Task Focus:
content

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Cultures and Sustainability Habits

Students watch one episode of a PRC television program to study media representation of different national minority groups and ecology in China.

Task Description:

Pre-Viewing Activity 6: Students conduct pre-listening worksheet about a CCTV program Green China 《綠色中國》. This is a multi-part television show produced by CCTV. Students are not expected to understand everything the voiceover is saying (he sometimes includes florid and descriptive language), but should get a lot of information from the images and presentation of what is green about China. Review Chinese geography and national minorities.

Viewing Activity 6.1: Students are given a handout and instructed to pay attention to the regions and national minorities covered in the first episode, and reflect on the different representations between the national minorities.

Post-viewing Activity 6.2: Review what students observed, answer and ask questions related to the show, consider what is the video telling us about Chinese people? What is it implicitly telling us (implicit: or 不言明的 or implication)?

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
reflection
Technology Tips:

The video and handouts for this activity were linked off the course's Googlesite webpage.

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Cultural Comparisons on Climate Change Action

Students compare and contrast US and Chinese government and individual responses to, and solutions for, combating climate change the ideologies behind those actions.

Task Description:

Viewing/Listening activity 7.3: Students watch Under the Dome 《穹頂之下》using specific guidelines and time stamps to follow from the handout.

Post-Viewing activity 7.4: Students discuss the film and compare the roles globalization (in class or with invited Chinese exchange students) and specific cultural beliefs/habits/traditions play a role in climate change effects and mitigation efforts.

 The student group that will target the Chinese college student population will have by now worked out their interview questions, conducted independent interviews, and invited participants to view and discuss climate change issues on campus. Those who are working with middle school students will have read Languages and Children: Making the Match by Helena Curtin (chapter on characteristics of middle school students), and devise an appropriate interaction with them.

 

Pre-reading Activity 8.0

Reading Activity 8.1 Read a news article about the US pulling out of the Paris Accords. 美国推出《巴黎協定》的阴雾难散(新民晚報 6/1/2017) (includes audio)

 

Post-reading Activity 8.2: Students compare and contrast US and Chinese government and individual responses to, and solutions for, combating climate change and the ideologies behind those actions through close observation of linguistic and visual content and descriptions critically interpreting the cultural responses of both governments and a variety of individuals, as well as their own assumptions and actions toward the subject.  

Task Type:
scaffolding
Task Focus:
content

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Inquiry

Students inquire about sustainability culture on campus or community of target audience

Task Description:

Part 4 Inquiry

Inquiring about Sustainability Culture on Campus/Community

9. Brainstorm how to survey Chinese students on campus/community to find out their awareness of climate change and their actions 

9.1. Devise appropriate interview questions activity

9.2. Peer review and feedback on questions

9.3. Interview Chinese peers/community

9.4. Document and report on interview/feedback from both clubs and Chinese students/community.

9.5. Write up a reflection.

Task Type:
driving question
Task Focus:
interaction

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Analysis

Students use analysis from "launching project" activities in order to strategize effective ways to introduce Chinese students to sustainability culture in the US.

Task Description:

Analysis

 Analyze data gathered from previous activities

10. Strategize what would be effective ways to introduce Chinese students to sustainability culture in the US, come up with ideas [what kind of information do you need to come up with a final project?]

10.1. Share ideas with class, peer feedback

10.2. Revise ideas based on feedback

10.3. Seek input from Chinese students for feedback and revision

10.4. Show and tell project in progress. Refine project as needed.

Task Type:
need to know
Task Focus:
interaction

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Think and Act

A sentence that summarizes this task.

Task Description:

Think and Act

11. Think about target audience, how, purpose, time/duration to complete project by completing an empathy map

11.1. Finalize idea as small group (of 4)

11.2. Share ideas with class (google docs)

11.3. List necessary tasks for this project and distribute each task to all class members

11.4. Create a timeline for the project

11.5. Work on individual tasks: keep a log to share with the class

11.6. Check the progress of the project

11.7. Check the final product in class

 

Students will design final team product and personal reflection using the rubrics for final projects.

Task Type:
driving question
Task Focus:
interaction

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Rubrics, Handouts, and Resources

These are the kinds of rubrics, handouts, and resources used for the project

Task Description:

Checklist and peer evaluations and final written and oral presentations

Handouts, reflections

Final Write-up

Rubrics

·         Oral and written communication rubrics will follow standard Chinese program

·         Self and peer feedback will follow standard Chinese program formats

·         Collaboration Rubric

·         Critical Thinking Rubric

·         Idea Rating Sheet Design

·         Management Log

·         PBLL Group Reporting Sheet

·         Project Ideas Launch

·         Project Launch Guide

·         Project Design Rubric

·         Small Group Responsibilities

 

 

Resources:

Project Audio, Visual, and Reading Materials on Project Website,     pre- and post-listening and reading activities sheets.

 

 

Technology Tips:

GoogleDocs

GoogleSites

Perusall.com

Goosechase.com

Voicethread.com

Youtube.com

Colorful sticky notes, colored pens, easel pad paper to post on walls

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Final Write-up

Students reflect on what they learned about the role culture plays in their actions regarding climate change and sustainability actions.

Task Description:

12.8. Final write-up Write a reflective essay about what you learned in this course about yourself in regards to climate change, and how culture plays a role in your actions. Was there anything that surprised you in this process? What would you like to see or do more of for your environment? Write about what you learned about yourself, working in a group, and designing a project for others. What did you find easy? What was difficult? How would you do it differently if there was a second time? What is your overall takeaway from the project? How does this project inform your (current) future career path?

Task Focus:
reflection

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