Before civilization began to impact the human life cycle approximately 10,000 years ago, human beings had high birth and death rates. Today the world is in the midst of a demographic transition - a transition to low birth and death rates - as the ability to control both disease and reproduction increases. Along the way, between these extremes, populations go through an intermediate period of continued high birth rates, combined with low death rates, resulting in a population explosion.
This lesson follows a flipped learning model where teachers don't stand before the class and lecture. Instead, students become grizzly bear scientists and "discover" the answers to real-world research questions through scientific inquiry.
Using real-world demographic data collected over 30 years on grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, students work individually, in three Science Teams, and as a class to determine whether or not this grizzly bear population is biologically ready for delisting.
Simulators which display cummulative generation graphs for variables. Very cool data rich resource! Includes Carbon cycle, demographis (human populations), Disease transmission, ecology, and energy simulations.
Data Analysis from The Cornell Lab-Basics of Science Pipes By Yoomee Kim, Lisa Adler-Golden, and Andrea McMillen (ESA) Science pipes works by clicking and dragging the data, operations, and desired output boxes to the workspace. You create a pipeline by drawing lines between the boxes. Activities include: Cemetery Demography, Darwin's Finches, Forest Population Structure and North American Pollen