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 FIVE
Oil Dependency Among Nations
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Introduction
The long-term prospects of an oil shortage have caused some nations to reconsider their foreign policy objectives. There is talk that some countries, the United States among them, are considering using military force to protect their oil supplies and secure more oil. While most nations have sped up their research into alternative energy sources, the short-term demand has forced large industrialized nations to acquire oil at any cost.
For most of the game we focus on events within the United States, for this lesson we will be looking out beyond our borders. As you present developments in the oil crisis, ask the students to talk realistically about their concerns for the effects in their own lives, as if the oil crisis were really happening.
Lesson Objectives
Students will:
- Continue to immerse themselves in the realistic WWO scenario.
- Locate on a map the major sources of oil for the United States and the world.
- Understand the importance of geography upon oil security.
- Understand the differing degrees to which nations consume and depend on oil.
- Consider what actions governments of the world could take to ensure their supply of oil.
- Predict the measures that will have to be taken by the United States and other oil dependent nations in the coming months.
Before the Lesson
- Preview the resource materials (links below).
- Prepare your own "in-game" reaction to the events unfolding in World Without Oil. What do you think about the actions that governments might take to secure their oil supplies? If you can, blog about what nations are doing and share your blog with your students.
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. Then start today's lesson by having the students read the following World Without Oil blog posts:
3. Show the satellite image of the Malacca Straits.
4. Your students are probably much more familiar with security troubles in the Middle East, in places such as Yemen.
Part 2: Take Action
1. Have students get into their groups and discuss their reactions to the citizen reports. Is the oil crisis making the U.S. more insecure?
2. Does China have the right to militarily control a waterway in Indonesia? Why or why not? You might want to compare China's view about the Straits of Malacca and the U.S.'s view about the Strait of Hormuz.
3. Now have the groups consider the actions of the United States in the game. Have students compare the differences and similarities between the actions taken by China and the United States. Should a single powerful nation control a resource simply because it has the military might to defend its actions?
Part 3: Lesson Activity
1. Provide each group with an outline map of the world. Have them find and label the world's top 15 oil-producing nations. Energy Information Administration (EIA) 2006 information
- Determine approximately how far the oil has to travel before it reaches the United States. Do oil tankers have to go through any treacherous waters to get to the United States?
- Are all of these oil-producing countries currently friendly to the U.S.?
2. How much oil do the top 15 oil-producing nations actually sell to the U.S.? United States oil imports by nation
3. You'll notice on the chart used in (2) that oil exported to the United States by a given country usually varies considerably from year to year (Saudi Arabia is a good example). This is because oil is a fungible product and producers generally sell their oil to whoever is willing to pay the highest price. What implications does this have during an oil crisis? Will the fast-growing economies of developing countries such as China and India compromise the ability of the United States to bid successfully for oil?
4. The U.S. currently uses far more oil than any other nation and an average American consumes twice as much oil as an average Italian, German or British citizen. Will this factor into decisions about who receives oil in the event of a global oil shortage?
5. A nation's oil reserves typically have little immediate effect on an oil crisis, because nations are unable to retrieve the oil quickly. But over time oil reserves may be very important for a nation's influence and power. Have students compare their labeled world map with the Who Has The Oil? map. If you consider proximity, does the United States need be worried about the fast-paced industrialization of India and China?
6. Have groups outline three foreign policy goals for the United States that revolve around the issue of oil. Have the groups share their goals.
Part 4: Reflect
The United States, China, Western Europe and India have significant oil needs and alternatives to oil will take years or decades to develop. In the meantime, much of the oil supply for the United States has to travel vast distances. In this reflection the students should consider the following questions:
- What steps if any should the United States take to secure its oil supply?
- Should the United Nations and the global community create some type of distribution policy?
- How can oil tankers and pipelines that traverse through potentially dangerous areas be secured?
- How much should this crisis shape American foreign policy in the coming years?
Part 5: Take It Further
Distribute this to your students:
Oil and energy-related situations arise throughout the world on a regular basis. Many of the major oil producing nations of the world face domestic turmoil that could affect the price and the availability of petroleum. To take it further today, go and explore oil-related current events. Visit the
Energy Bulletin Web site and select a region outside North America. Look for news articles about countries that supply the United States with oil. In your blog, summarize and analyze the importance of this information to the United States. What do these current events suggest might happen in an oil crisis?
Additional Resources
View the student page for this lesson >>
View lesson six >>
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 5: Specific Standards
Civics
Standard 16:
Understands the major responsibilities of the national government for domestic and foreign policy and understands how government is financed through taxation
Level IV, Benchmark 1:
Understands how specific foreign policies such as national security and trade policy affect the everyday lives of American citizens and their communities
Standard 22:
Understands how the world is organized politically into nation-states, how nation-states interact with one another and issues surrounding U.S. foreign policy
Level IV, Benchmark 7:
Understands the idea of the national interest and how it is used as a criterion for shaping American foreign policy
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 (e.g., policies for dealing with problems of recession and inflation; the Nixon administrationšs "southern strategy;" Carteršs program for dealing with the energy crisis)
Level IV. Benchmark 5:
Understands the influence of U.S. foreign policy on international events from Nixon to Clinton (e.g., the U.S.šs role in the evolving political struggles in the Middle East, Africa, Asia and Latin America; foreign policy in the post-Cold War era; U.S. goals and objectives in the Middle East; the pros and cons of U.S. intervention in the Persian Gulf under Reagan and G.Bush; how human rights has been used in American foreign policy)
World History
Standard 44:
Understands the search for community, stability and peace in an interdependent world
Level IV, Benchmark 3:
Understands major reasons for the great disparities between industrialized and developing nations (e.g., disparities in resources, production, capital investment, labor, or trade; possible programs and measures to help equalize these disparities)
State Standards (All Lessons)
Credits
Lesson plans by Dan McDowell and Ken Eklund
Reviewed by Cari Ladd