Worldwide Locations
Worldwide Locations
Worldwide Locations
Worldwide Locations
The global demand for freshwater is soaring as supply is becoming more uncertain. Today, more than one billion people do not have adequate access to safe water. That’s one in six humans on earth. The United Nations projects that by the year 2025, half of the countries worldwide will face water stress or shortages. By 2050, as many as three out of four people around the globe could be affected by water scarcity. (Asia's Next Challenge: Securing the Region's Water Future, 2009, Asia Society)
This lesson is a series of formative tasks that help students understand water security issues. The formative tasks provide a foundation for students to conduct their own research and action project.
Social studies, although there are math, art, and digital production options that make this a good interdisciplinary unit.
Modular tasks mean that this can take as few as one class period, or up to a three-week multifaceted investigation.
See activites sheet (Word doc) for specific requirements for formative tasks.
Asia Society, Asia's Next Challenge: Securing the Region's Water Future
Asia Society: Asia’s Next Challenge Video
Part one: formative tasks
Define what water security is: the ability to ensure people have access to drinking water. Without it, people die. Water security is one of the most pressing challenges of the 21st century. Americans live, on average, on 82 gallons of water per day, but in most parts of the world, the average is between four and eight gallons of water.
See the activity sheet for a series of formative tasks to help students understand how little water there is, and what shortages mean around the world. The activities are modular; select the ones that best suit your objectives and the amount of time you have. Note that the activities are multidisciplinary, and can be covered in math or physical education classes.
Part two: action project