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Protecting Rainforest Futures

Other • Year 11 • 180 • 15 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Australian Curriculum (F-10)

Other
1Year 11
180
15 students
14 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

Critically assess threats to the rainforest and propose feasible sustainability solutions

Protecting Rainforest Futures

Curriculum Alignment

Learning Area: Cross-curriculum priority – Sustainability (General Capabilities), and Geography (Human–Environment Sustainability concepts)

Relevant framework:
Australian Curriculum – Senior Secondary Geography (Year 11 – Unit 1: Natural and ecological hazards)
Focus: Environmental change and management, threat mitigation, and sustainability


Lesson Overview

Title: Critically Evaluating Threats to Rainforests and Designing Sustainable Futures
Duration: 180 minutes (3 hours)
Year level: Year 11
Class size: 15 students
Learning Mode: Blended learning (collaborative activities, multimedia analysis, reflective writing, solution design project)


Learning Intentions

By the end of this lesson, students will:

  • Understand and critically evaluate the primary environmental, political and economic threats to global and Australian rainforests.
  • Analyse the interdependence of human and ecological systems in rainforest biomes.
  • Propose innovative, feasible, and sustainable strategies to mitigate these threats.
  • Apply systems thinking to evaluate long-term impacts of their proposed solutions.

Success Criteria

Students will:

  • Accurately identify and explain key threats to rainforest ecosystems with supporting evidence.
  • Engage in critical discussion about the socio-economic and political contributors to deforestation.
  • Produce a group sustainability proposal that includes both short-term actions and long-term ecological management.
  • Demonstrate deeper understanding through reflective evaluation of their own and others’ ideas.

Resources Required

  • A3 paper, markers, post-it notes
  • Access to multimedia equipment (projector + speakers)
  • Printed case study material (Amazon, Daintree)
  • Student iPads/laptops
  • Rubric for assessing sustainability proposals
  • Expert interview video — ecologist or Indigenous land manager (pre-recorded or simulated)
  • Rainforest Biome Systems Map (printed and digital)

Lesson Structure

Part 1: Setting the Scene (30 minutes)

Activity: Rainforest Reality Check

  • Warm-Up Exercise (10 mins): "What is being lost each minute?" — Students stand up each time a square metre of forest is ‘lost’, as narrated by teacher using live global deforestation rate statistics.

  • Think-Pair-Share (10 mins):

    • Think: What causes this?
    • Pair: Discuss with a partner.
    • Share: Class discussion recorded on butcher’s paper (sorted into categories: Economic, Agricultural, Political, Cultural, Climatic).
  • Mini-Lecture (10 mins):

    • Teacher-led overview: Global and Australian rainforest threats (focus on Daintree Forest)
    • Link discussion to sustainability curriculum strands: Human impact, resource management, Indigenous land knowledge.

Part 2: Investigating the Threats (45 minutes)

Activity: Case Study Carousel

Students will rotate through 3 different stations, each involving a different threat.

Station 1: Logging and Agricultural Expansion

  • Materials: Maps showing historical land-use change, local news articles on Australian rainforest logging.
  • Students annotate maps with cause-effect chains.

Station 2: Mining and Infrastructure Projects

  • Materials: Torres Strait mine developments and Indigenous community rebuttals.
  • Roleplay cards: students take on perspectives (miner, protester, ecologist, policymaker).

Station 3: Climate Change and Biodiversity Loss

  • Interactive: “Climate dominoes” game correlating emissions, temperature rise, and species extinction rates.

Outcome:
At each station, students complete a section of a linked graphic organiser showing the pressures threatening rainforest resilience.


Part 3: Expert Insight (30 minutes)

Video Viewing + Structured Discussion

Watch (15 mins): Ecologist + Indigenous Ranger discussing:

  • Loss of biodiversity in the Wet Tropics
  • Importance of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK)
  • Need for co-management of rainforest resources

Discussion (15 mins): Students use Y-Chart:

  • What it looks like
  • What it sounds like
  • What it feels like
    … to reflect on sustainable rainforest management based on insights from Indigenous knowledge.

Part 4: Create a Solution (60 minutes)

Activity: Rainforest Revival Challenge

Task Brief:
Students work in teams of 3 to create a Rainforest Sustainability Proposal addressing one major threat. Their solution must be:

  • Ecologically sound
  • Socially inclusive
  • Economically feasible
  • Ethically sustainable

Each group produces a pitch presentation (poster or digital presentation).

Supports Provided:

  • Success Criteria Rubric
  • “Solution Checker”: set of questions to assess effectiveness and sustainability
  • Prompt Cards: complexity layers (e.g. add the voice of Indigenous stakeholders; consider tourism impact; add climate variable)

Part 5: Present and Reflect (15 + 15 minutes)

Group Presentations (15 mins)
Each group delivers a concise 3-minute rapid pitch to the class (poster walkthrough, concept explanation, value justification).

Class Gallery Walk + Sticky Notes (15 mins)
Students walk around viewing each proposal, sticking post-it notes:

  • One question
  • One compliment
  • One improvement suggestion

Differentiation Strategies

  • Visual, auditory, and kinaesthetic tasks integrated throughout
  • Graphic organisers scaffold deeper thinking
  • Extension tasks: Students can compare rainforest solutions in Australia to Amazon or Congo examples
  • Support: Sentence starters and prompting questions available for students who need literacy support

Assessment Strategies

Formative:

  • Graphic organiser at carousel stations
  • Class contributions during pair-share and Y-chart activity
  • Peer feedback during gallery walk

Summative:

  • Group sustainability proposal — assessed against criteria rubric
  • Individual Reflection Exit Ticket:

    “What is one sustainability idea you believe could work in Australia right now? Justify your answer in 3–4 sentences.”


Links to General Capabilities & Cross-Curriculum Priorities

  • Critical and Creative Thinking: Sustainability proposals + roleplay decision making
  • Ethical Understanding: Community impact of actions on Indigenous people and biodiversity
  • Intercultural Understanding: Application of TEK and Indigenous voices
  • Sustainability Priority: Evaluating strategies for real-world impact on rainforest conservation

Teacher Reflection Prompt (Post-lesson)

  • Which student proposals showed the most interdisciplinary thinking?
  • How did students engage with Indigenous perspectives today?
  • Would incorporating a virtual tour of Daintree deepen understanding next time?

Extension & Homework Ideas

  • Students interview a community elder or local council member involved in land management.
  • Research how Australia’s government manages World Heritage rainforest areas.
  • Begin a mini-research project: “Could ecotourism save the rainforest?”

Prepared by:
AI Lesson Design Assistant – Aligned to Australian Senior Geography and Sustainability Capabilities

For:
Year 11 – Secondary Teachers Seeking Innovative, Standards-Aligned Curriculum Experiences

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