Lesson Climate Change and Cars
(K-2)

Quick Look

Grade Level: 2 (K-2)

Time Required: 45 minutes

Lesson Dependency: None

A screenshot from a video showing a car driving past a large pile of carbon.
How much carbon to cars send into the atmosphere?
copyright
Copyright © 2020 NOVA, Public Broadcasting Service

Summary

This lesson introduces students to the concepts of climate change and what affects it. By the end of the lesson, students should have a basic understanding of the greenhouse effect, the carbon cycle, global warming, and how transportation can contribute to global warming. Students work together to understand how various forms of transportation have costs and benefits, and which modes of transportation are better for the environment.

Engineering Connection

Understanding the negative impact gas-powered cars have on the environment empowers engineers to develop alternative modes of transportation. With the rise of electric vehicles on the market, different engineers who specialize in chemical, mechanical, and electrical engineering (and various other disciplines in engineering) can work together to design and develop car materials that are more sustainable and environmentally conscious.

Learning Objectives

After this lesson, students be able to:

  • Describe the greenhouse effect.
  • Recall the role carbon dioxide plays in the greenhouse effect.
  • Recognize how transportation can affect the greenhouse effect.

Worksheets and Attachments

Visit [www.teachengineering.org/curriculum/print/cub-2635-climate-change-cars-k-2-lesson] to print or download.

Pre-Req Knowledge

An understanding of the atmosphere, gases, energy, and transportation.

Introduction/Motivation

It is important for us to understand how we can prevent climate change. Earth is the only planet in our solar system that supports life because it traps and releases heat at the same rate, which means that we have just enough heat to sustain life. If we release too much heat, we will become like Mars, not warm enough to sustain life. But if we trap too much heat, we will become like Venus, too hot to sustain life.

A carbon footprint is how much carbon dioxide an individual releases into the atmosphere. As people who live on this planet, our goal should be to reduce our own carbon footprints and push for industrial changes that will slow down global warming. One of the main ways an individual can reduce their carbon footprint is through the transportation they use.

Lesson Background and Concepts for Teachers

This lesson introduces students to the concepts of climate change and how cars can contribute to it. Students learn about the basics of the greenhouse effect and the carbon cycle. They also learn how transportation affects our atmosphere. Students work together to understand how various forms of transportation have costs and benefits, and which modes of transportation are better for the environment.

Greenhouse gases (GHGs) are the gases in Earth’s atmosphere that trap the heat from the sun. The process of trapping heat from the sun is called the greenhouse effect. A greenhouse is a glass building used to grow plants. It stays warm through all of the seasons because it traps heat from sunlight during the daytime and that trapped heat stays throughout the night, keeping the temperatures in the greenhouse warm enough for plants to grow. Even during the cold of winter! The Earth’s atmosphere functions similar to a greenhouse.

The burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil has released more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, which in turn traps more sunlight and warms up the Earth significantly. We are at a point where we are releasing more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than the Earth can handle.

This is what we call global warming, the gradual increase of Earth’s temperature due to the excessive release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere—and this is what is causing our climates to change.

Climate is the overall weather conditions that are expected in a region at a particular time of year. This is different from the weather which we can think of as more of a day-to-day phenomenon. Did it rain today? Is it sunny today? Those are weather conditions and what we describe when we say “what’s the weather like today?” Climate is more long-term: “Antarctica is at the southern pole, so it will be cold all year round. We can expect it to snow there every day because we have seen that for the last 30 years.”

Procedure:

A screenshot from NASA depicting where greenhouse gases exist in the atmosphere.
How do cars affect what happens in our atmosphere?
copyright
Copyright © 2020 NASA, Public Domain

  1. Show students the following video, “What Is the Greenhouse Effect?”- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SN5-DnOHQmE&t=1s (2:29)
  2. Using the K-2 Climate Change and Cars Worksheet, ask the students to discuss what they learned in the video. Specifically, ask them the following questions:
    • What is the greenhouse effect?
    • Why is the greenhouse effect important to life on Earth?
  1.  Have students write out or draw their answers in section 1 of the K-2 Climate Change and Cars Worksheet.
  2. Tell the students: Tell students the following: Carbon is an element that is essential to life on Earth. Carbon is found in seawater, rocks, soil, all living organisms, and the atmosphere. When carbon is in the atmosphere it can be found in the form of carbon dioxide (CO2). Carbon dioxide is a gas that is naturally found on Earth.

The carbon cycle describes how carbon, including the carbon in CO2, travels from the atmosphere to the Earth and back to the atmosphere. For example, carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is taken in by plants and pulled apart to make food from the carbon to grow. Eventually, animals eat plants, and the carbon is returned to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide through animal or human respiration.

A graphic showing emissions from industrial plants and cars.
What can we do to limit the release of carbon?
copyright
Copyright © 2020 NASA, Public Domain

  1. Show students the following video, “What is the carbon cycle?” - https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/carbon-cycle.html (1:16).
  2.  Ask the students what other ways carbon dioxide travels throughout the carbon cycle and have them write or draw their answer in section 2 of the K-2 Climate Change and Cars Worksheet.
  3. Tell the students the following: As the climate crisis continues, it is important to recognize how human activities are affecting the crisis. One of the biggest problems negatively contributing to the greenhouse effect is carbon emissions from transportation — cars, buses, trains, etc.
  4. Show the students the following video, “Climate Science in a Nutshell” - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpazvRVh4y0 (2:48).
  5. Have the students think-pair-share to answer the following questions in section 3 of the K-2 Climate Change and Cars Worksheet.
    • In our cities and towns what adds more CO2 into the atmosphere?
    • What kind of energy causes more CO2 to enter the atmosphere?
    • In 2009, how many tons of CO2 did the average person use? How many African elephants is that equivalent to?
    • How many parts per million (ppm) of CO2 is in the atmosphere right now? What number do we want to reduce the ppm of CO2 down to?
  1. Ask students, “What are things in your house or school that use fossil fuel energy?” Ask them if they know of any better alternatives? Have the students participate in a class discussion about renewable energy.
  2. Show the students the following video, “What if Carbon Left Your Tailpipe as Solid Chunks?” - https://www.pbs.org/video/carbon-car-tailpipe-solid-chunks/ (2:12).
  3. Do another think-pair-share as a class to answer the following questions in section 4 of the K-2 Climate Change and Cars Worksheet:
    • What do they show coming out of the car’s tailpipe in the video?
    • How many car “turds” does an average car dump per year? How is that shown in the video?
  1. Have a class reflection discussion to wrap up:
    • How do you get to school? Do you take the bus? Do your parents drop you in their car? Do you walk? Do you carpool with a friend?
    • Which form of transportation do you think is cleaner?
    • Which form of transportation do you think is less clean?
    • Are there cars out there that do not have exhaust or (or “turds” like the car in the video)?
  1. Ask students, “How do you believe engineers can design better cars that produce fewer carbon emissions (car “turds”)?” Ask them if they think there is another source of energy to run cars instead of using gas. Ask students if they have heard of electric vehicles (EVs) and how they work (battery-powered electric motors, which do not release any exhaust (no emissions=no car “turds”!)

Lesson Closure

What did we learn from the worksheet and activity? Transportation emits a lot of carbon into the atmosphere. As the climate crisis grows bigger, engineers are trying to reduce the carbon footprints left by their designs. Now that you have learned how transportation can affect the greenhouse effect, how would you explain what you learned to your friends or family?

Vocabulary/Definitions

carbon dioxide: A greenhouse gas that comes from burning fossil fuels.

carbon footprint: The amount of greenhouse gas emissions caused by a person or group.

climate: The long-term weather events of a region, such as its average rainfall or its average high/low temperatures.

emission: Gases released into the atmosphere.

gas: An air-like fluid substance that expands freely to fill up any free space, regardless of its quantity.

greenhouse gas: A gas that traps the heat in the Earth's atmosphere like carbon dioxide, methane, water vapor, ozone, and nitrous oxide.

transportation: A way of moving people from one place to another like cars, buses, trains, etc.

weather: The short-term events such as a current rainstorm or temperature.

Assessment

Pre-Lesson Assessment

Discussion Questions: Ask the students and discuss as a class:

  • What is the greenhouse effect?
  • Why is Earth the only planet that supports life?
  • What is climate change?
  • Tell students they will find out more about how transportation affects the greenhouse effect.

Lesson Embedded (Formative) Assessment

Guided Worksheet: Have students work together as they complete the Climate Change and Cars Worksheet as a class, as directed in the Lesson Instructional Plan section.

Post-Lesson (Summative) Assessment

Class Reflection: Have the students reflect on their learning by asking the same questions from the pre-lesson assessment. Additionally, ask:

  • Have you heard of climate change before this lesson?
  • Did anything you learned change the ideas you had about the greenhouse effect or climate change in general?
  • How would you explain the greenhouse effect to your parents or other family members?
  • What transportation did you use to get to school today? Would you change that?

Making Sense: Have students reflect on the science concepts they explored and/or the science and engineering skills they used, plus questions or ideas they have by completing a modified Making Sense Assessment.

Additional Multimedia Support

What Is the Greenhouse Effect?

Causes | Facts – Climate Change: Vital Signs of the Planet

Carbon Cycle Greenhouse Gases

What's the Difference Between Weather and Climate?

Fast Facts on Transportation Greenhouse Gas Emissions | US EPA

Greenhouse Effect 101

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References

“The Causes of Climate Change.” NASA, NASA, 30 Aug. 2021, https://climate.nasa.gov/causes/.

“Climate Science in a Nutshell #5: Where Does Carbon Dioxide.” YouTube, Planet Nutshell, 24 Sept. 2010, www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpazvRVh4y0.

“What if Carbon Left Your Tailpipe as Solid Chunks?” PBS, Nova, 5 Feb. 2020, www.pbs.org/video/carbon-car-tailpipe-solid-chunks/.

US Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “What Is the Carbon Cycle?” NOAA's National Ocean Service, NOAA, 2 Apr. 2019, oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/carbon-cycle.html.

“What Is the Greenhouse Effect?” YouTube, Nasa Space Place. Accessed July 1, 2021. Published June 11, 2020, www.youtube.com/watch?v=SN5-DnOHQmE&t=1s.

“What Is the Greenhouse Effect?” NASA, NASA, 2021, https://climatekids.nasa.gov/greenhouse-effect/.

“What's the Difference Between Weather and Climate?” NASA, NASA, 2021, https://climatekids.nasa.gov/weather-climate/.

Copyright

© 2022 by Regents of the University of Colorado Boulder

Contributors

Niharika Kunapuli; Jennifer Taylor

Supporting Program

Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, Pre-College Engineering Education, University of Colorado Boulder

Acknowledgements

This curriculum was developed under National Science Foundation grant number 1941524. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

This curriculum was developed with support from the AEROKATS and ROVER Education Network (AREN) (Henry/NNX16AB95A). AREN is a NASA Science Mission Directorate Science Activation (SciAct) Program.

Last modified: September 27, 2024

Hands-on Activity Carbon Emissions:
Carl’s Carbon!

Quick Look

Grade Level: 2 (K-2)

Time Required: 45 minutes

Expendable Cost/Group: US $0.00

Group Size: 3

Activity Dependency: None

Clipart of different modes of transportation
What kind of decisions do we make when choosing transportation?
copyright
Copyright © 2022 ppokta, Public Domain, freesvg.org

Summary

This activity introduces students to the concepts of climate change and what affects it. Students work together to understand how various forms of transportation have costs and benefits, and which modes of transportation are better for the environment.

Engineering Connection

Understanding the negative impact gas-powered cars have on the environment empowers engineers to develop alternative modes of transportation. With the rise of electric vehicles on the market, different engineers that specialize in chemical, mechanical, and electrical engineering (and various other disciplines in engineering) can work together to design and develop car materials that are more sustainable and environmentally conscious.

Learning Objectives

After this activity, students should be able to:

  • Describe the greenhouse effect.
  • Recall the role carbon dioxide plays in the greenhouse effect.
  • Recognize how transportation can affect the greenhouse effect.

Materials List

Each student needs:

For entire class

  • computer, laptop, or table with internet access
  • projector

Worksheets and Attachments

Visit [www.teachengineering.org/curriculum/print/cub-2635-climate-change-cars-k-2-lesson] to print or download.

Pre-Req Knowledge

A basic understanding of the atmosphere, gases, energy, and transportation.

Introduction/Motivation

Transportation is a way of getting from one place to another. What are some examples? [Ask students to volunteer answers in an open discussion. Use Google images to show various images of cars, trains, buses, planes, bikes, etc.] The most basic mode of transportation is walking.

What modes of transportation do you use to get to school? [Students may offer the following or similar answers: buses, walking, cars, carpooling, etc.]

Carbon emissions are the carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere by transportation. Carbon emissions are a result of burning fossil fuels for energy. What modes of transportation emit carbon dioxide? [Students should answer with any vehicle that emits gas—cars, steam-powered trains, airplanes, buses, motorcycles, etc.]

What modes of transportation do not emit carbon dioxide? [Students should answer with walking, biking, skateboarding, rollerblading.]

Why might it be harder to walk to school instead of driving a car? [Students should mention things like the time it takes for each, walking might be more tiring, the weather might be too bad for a walk, etc.]

How can we solve these problems? [Ask students to volunteer solutions for any of the answers they gave to the previous question. They might mention carpooling, using bikes instead of walking, using the bus on days with bad weather, etc.]

Some of the problems and solutions we just mentioned involve trade-offs. What do you think a tradeoff is? [Let students offer their ideas.] A tradeoff is a choice you make that benefits you in one way, but at the same time results in you losing another quality. For example, if you spend your allowance on a video game, you gain the video game, but you “lose” (by spending) your allowance and no longer have that money to buy something else.

Here’s another example: we might choose to drive a car because it is easier for us than to walk, but cars emit carbon dioxide. And carbon dioxide is not good for the environment.

We should think about these trade-offs more to understand why there are so many different modes of transportation and which ones are the best.

Let’s get started to learn which modes of transportation are better for our environment!

Procedure

Background

The kind of transportation we choose can have a big impact on the environment. As engineers work to create more energy-efficient vehicles, students should consider why it may be hard for people to switch over to the current options available to them.

In this activity, students are introduced to the idea of trade-offs and why the choices we make every day can be significant. Students should recognize how many different modes of transportation exist and why we may choose one over the other.

Clipart of a man running late to work.
Let’s help Carl make a decision about how to get to work!
copyright
Copyright © 2022 OpenClipart, Public Domain, freesvg.org

Before the Activity

With the Students 

  1. Divide the class into pairs or small groups to work together.
  2. Set the stage for the activity by reading aloud the Introduction / Motivation section.
  3. As a class, read and discuss the “Problem”, “Constraints (limits)”, and “Transportation Trade-offs” sections in Carl’s Carbon Worksheet.
  4. Next, in the “Imagine” section of the Carl’s Carbon Worksheet, have students draw or write their thoughts on the best and worst forms of transportation and why.
    •  Have students share their ideas as a class.
  1. For the “Design” section of Carl’s Carbon Worksheet, introduce and discuss each day’s transportation challenge.
  2. As a class, go through Carl’s Trip Tracker table day by day to determine the best solution for Carl to get to work on time with the limits (constraints) he is facing.
  3. Have a class discussion to determine the key constraint each day that Carl must overcome related to weather, cost, travel time, available money, and any health bonus considerations.
  4. Get to a consensus as a class on the best way for Carl to get to work each day and circle the best choice that the class agrees on.
  5. For the “Test” section of Carl’s Carbon Worksheet, calculate Carl’s total carbon cost for the week by adding each day’s carbon cost for the week. Circle Carl’s Carbon Footprint amount based on his travel decisions during the week.
  6. Reflect on the process students used for making Carl’s transportation decisions based on the constraints he faced each day. Ask students if their thoughts on the best and worst forms of transportation have changed from their initial thoughts in the “Imagine” section.

Conclusion

When you have more people in the car or bus, the amount of pollution per person is less, that's why carpooling or taking the bus reduces your carbon footprint. Walking or using your bike is even better for the environment because there is no exhaust full of carbon dioxide. As the climate crisis grows bigger, engineers are trying to reduce the carbon footprints left by their designs. For example, more and more electric cars are being sold as engineers figure out ways to make them more efficient. Along with the growth in electric vehicles, many engineers are finding solutions to make it easier to switch over, like creating electrically charged roads. Now that you have learned how transportation can affect the greenhouse effect, would you try any of the transportation modes in the activity?

Vocabulary/Definitions

carbon emissions: Carbon emissions are the carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere due to the activities from humans.

carbon footprint: The amount of CO2 released into the atmosphere because of one's own energy needs.

parts per million: Expresses the smallest possible unit.

transportation: The movement of humans, animals, and goods from one place to another.

Assessment

Pre-Activity Assessment

Discussion Questions: Ask the students and discuss as a class:

  • What methods of transportation do you use to get to school? Do you ride in a car or on the bus often?
  • Do you know if they use fossil fuels?
  • What effect do gas cars have on the environment?
  • Are there any alternatives?

Activity Embedded (Formative) Assessment

Guided Worksheet: Have students work together in small groups or individually on the Carl’s Carbon Worksheet. Once they are finished, have them volunteer to share their answers with the class.

Post-Activity (Summative) Assessment

Real-Life Application: Have the students create their own table similar to the one provided in the worksheet by using local weather, bus fare and gas rates, average travel times, and more to plan out their commute to school.

Making Sense: Have students reflect on the science concepts they explored and/or the science and engineering skills they used, plus questions or ideas they have by completing a modified Making Sense Assessment.

Investigating Questions

Essential Questions:

  • What is the greenhouse effect?
  • What is the carbon cycle?
  • How does transportation affect the greenhouse effect?

Answer:

The greenhouse effect is the process by which Earth traps heat from the sun, which allows Earth to maintain the perfect temperature for sustaining life. The carbon cycle is important because carbon is an essential part of the Earth’s ability to maintain the greenhouse effect. In recent years, increased transportation has released more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, increasing the temperature of Earth.

Activity Extensions

https://climatekids.nasa.gov/menu/make/

https://kidsagainstclimatechange.co/start-learning/

Activity Scaling

3-5 Carbon Emissions Activity

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PS: We do not share personal information or emails with anyone.

References

Prado, Luis. “Exhaust Gas on the Noun Project.” The Noun Project, The Noun Project, thenounproject.com/term/exhaust-gas/597970/

Copyright

© 2022 by Regents of the University of Colorado Boulder

Contributors

Niharika Kunapuli; Jennifer Taylor

Supporting Program

Pre-College Engineering Education, Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, University of Colorado Boulder

Acknowledgements

This curriculum was developed under National Science Foundation grant number 1941524. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.

This curriculum was developed with support from the AEROKATS and ROVER Education Network (AREN) (Henry/NNX16AB95A). AREN is a NASA Science Mission Directorate Science Activation (SciAct) Program.

Last modified: July 1, 2022