Lesson Plans for Teachers
LESSON ONE
Oil Crisis:
Get Into the Game
A global oil crisis has begun. Oil usage worldwide has increased to where the oil supply can only meet 95 percent of the demand. Begin the inquiry into the effects of less oil in our lives.
LESSON TWO:
How Bad Can It Get?
Fuel prices rise in anticipation of when actual supplies start to run short. It's clear that there is no quick fix to the shortage. Tensions start to rise.
LESSON THREE:
Life Is Starting to Change
Widespread changes are starting. Goods and services that depended on cheap oil are failing.
LESSON FOUR:
Elasticity and Collapse
This lesson investigates the factors that define elasticity in relation to oil—factors such as lifestyle, geography, setting and community.
LESSON FIVE:
Oil Dependency
Among Nations
The oil crisis has caused some nations to reconsider their foreign policy objectives—and to aggressively seek to acquire oil.
LESSON SIX:
Food Without Oil
The impact of oil on our food supply is one of the most serious aspects of the oil crisis. Shortages are forcing many people to look for locally grown food.
LESSON SEVEN:
Breakdown
Governments have been hit as hard as anyone by the crisis, leading to the existence of red and green zones in cities and refugee camps in rural areas.
LESSON EIGHT:
Preparation and Community
With problems piling up and the government unable to help, many communities across the nation are turning inward for solutions.
LESSON NINE:
Lessons Learned
Now that the crisis has stabilized, how do we go forward? How do we balance our desire for energy's benefits with the risks and costs of procuring it?
LESSON TEN:
Your World Without Oil
Help out the World Without Oil team. Script and deliver your own citizen report that communicates what is happening to you in the crisis.
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TEACHERS: LESSON TWO
How Bad Can It Get?
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Introduction
It's now been a few weeks since the announcement that the world was running short of oil. Fuel prices continue to rise in anticipation of when actual supplies start to run short. It's becoming clear that there is no quick fix to the shortage, but many citizens are starting to hoard fuel anyway. Tensions are starting to rise.
In this and succeeding lessons, you present developments in the oil crisis as though they were really happening and ask the students to treat these developments as reality in their own lives. As they try to anticipate what will happen next in the crisis, they will naturally explore the relationships between lifestyle and resources. As their inquiry brings up topics and issues, you can use the resources we provide to enhance students' understanding.
Lesson Objectives
Students will:
- Continue to immerse themselves in the realistic World Without Oil (WWO) scenario.
- Consider the problems that we might face during a prolonged oil shortage.
- Outline solutions that may help avert these negative consequences: from the personal to community and national decisions.
- Compare the events of the oil crises of 1973 and 1979 to the anticipated events of the current (fictional) shortage.
- Continue to develop strategies predicated upon anticipated events.
- Continue to reflect on the life changes that would occur during a prolonged oil shortage.
Before the Lesson
- Read the Week 4 news report.
- Review the two Wikipedia articles on past oil crises (links below).
- Preview the resource materials (links below).
- Prepare your own "in-game" reaction to the events unfolding in World Without Oil. How will these new developments impact you personally? What changes are you seeing in the world around you due to the crisis? What actions are you taking in response? If you can, blog it and have your students follow your blog.
Part 1: Set the Stage
Student Page for this lesson >>
This page summarizes ideas and instructions for students.
1. Re-immerse the students: briefly remind them of what's happened previously in a World Without Oil.
2. Begin the day by showing Kal's "Organized Violence" video.
Also read Anda's webcomic about college students.
Part 2: Take Action
1. As a class, discuss what might have pushed people to react with violence. Why are people angry?
2. If the crisis continues for months or years, who is going to be impacted the most? (Who will end up with less oil?) Why?
Part 3: Lesson Activity
1. Have the students re-form into the small groups established in Lesson One. Assign each group one of the following WWO citizen reports to read. Then have each group discuss the following: do the students feel that events such as these (depicted by Kalwithoutoil and Anda) could occur in their community? Why or why not? How much do they feel the oil crisis is impacting their neighborhood, community and city, and why? Have each group deliver a short presentation about the citizen report and their own reactions to it.
2. What about government action? Ask students about the 1973 and 1979 oil crises in the U.S. and share information on the immediate actions (gas rationing, national speed limit) and the longer-term outcomes (more fuel efficient cars, etc.) that the United States government implemented. Would those actions work today? Would they help prevent the events described in the WWO citizen reports?
3. If time permits, have students read the following citizen analysis and react to it.
Part 4: Reflect
Now that the students know that the situation is serious and that people are already showing the ugly side of human nature, they should start thinking about the events that might erupt around them. Use the following questions to help guide their reflection:
- How are people in your region reacting?
- How are you involved?
- Based upon these events, how are you feeling about the future?
Part 5: Take It Further
Distribute this to your students:
Some of life's best lessons are learned by listening to the words of those who have experienced events that have shaped our world. To take it further today, find a parent, grandparent, or family friend that remembers the 1973 and/or 1979 oil crises. What exactly do they remember? How did they have to change their lives? Are they surprised that the United States continues to be so dependent on oil? Do they think the lessons of the 1970s have been lost and if so, why? Share the responses through your blog, a video interview, or a podcast.
Additional Resources
View the student page for this lesson >>
View lesson three >>
World Without Oil Classroom Home >>
McREL Standards
National Standards (McREL)
Overarching (All Lessons)
Standard 44.
Understands the search for community, stability and peace in an interdependent world
Level IV (Grades 9-12), Benchmark 2:
Understands rates of economic development and the emergence of different economic systems around the globe (e.g., systems of economic management in communist and capitalist countries, as well as the global impact of multinational corporations; the impact of black markets, speculation and trade in illegal products on national and global markets; patterns of inward, outward and internal migration in the Middle East and North Africa, types of jobs involved and the impact of the patterns upon national economies; the rapid economic development of East Asian countries in the late 20th century and the relatively slow development of Sub-Saharan African countries)
Lesson 1: Specific Standards
United States History
Standard 30:
Understands developments in foreign policy and domestic politics between the Nixon and Clinton presidencies
Level IV, Benchmark 1: Understands how the Nixon, Ford and Carter administrations dealt with major domestic issues
World History
Standard 44:
Understands the search for community, stability and peace in an interdependent world
Level IV, Benchmark 4:
Understands the oil crisis and its aftermath in the 1970s (e.g., how the oil crisis revealed the extent and complexity of global economic interdependence; events that have affected world oil prices since 1950; relationships between U.S. domestic energy policy and foreign policy in oil producing regions since 1970)
State Standards (All Lessons)
Credits
Lesson plans by Dan McDowell and Ken Eklund
Reviewed by Cari Ladd