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Plastic in Oceans

Geography • 40 • 26 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Geography
40
26 students
4 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

I want the plan to focus on plastic in the ocean, impacts and causes. I will use a poster of the ocean as a stimulus. include how students can take action. include concrete materials and assessment, group work or pair work

Plastic in Oceans

Lesson Details

  • Class: 5th and 6th Class (Ages approx. 10-12)
  • Duration: 40 minutes
  • Class Size: 26 students
  • Subject: Geography
  • Curriculum Reference: IE Curriculum – Geography, Environmental Awareness & Civic and Social Education (CSE).

Curriculum Alignment and Learning Objectives

Relevant Strands and Strand Units (from IE Curriculum Framework for Geography)

  • Natural Environments: Living things in the environment
  • Human Environments: People and the environment
  • Environmental Awareness and Care: Investigating environmental issues and taking action

Learning Objectives:
By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:

  • Describe the causes of plastic pollution in the ocean. (Strand: Natural Environments)
  • Identify the harmful impacts plastic has on marine life and ecosystems. (Strand: Natural Environments)
  • Discuss ways in which people contribute to this pollution and actions they can take to reduce it. (Strand: Human Environments & Environmental Awareness and Care)
  • Collaborate effectively in pairs and small groups to analyse information and produce a creative response. (Competence: Working with Others)
  • Express their understanding using concrete materials and through oral and written communication. (Competence: Communicating)

Success Criteria

  • I can explain one cause of plastic pollution in the ocean.
  • I can name one problem plastic causes for sea animals.
  • I can suggest two ways I can help reduce ocean plastic pollution.
  • I can work well with my classmates to create a group poster or presentation.

Materials Needed

  • Large, vibrant poster of the ocean showing marine animals, with plastic litter visible (stimulus)
  • Small recycling bins or boxes for sorting game (plastic, paper, organic waste)
  • Sets of plastic items (clean empty bottles, wrappers, straws) as concrete materials
  • Flipchart paper and coloured markers for group work
  • A simple fact sheet on ocean plastic pollution (prepared by the teacher)
  • Sticky notes or small cards for “Take Action” ideas

Lesson Structure

1. Engage and Explore (10 minutes)

  • Display the large ocean poster centrally. Invite students to observe quietly for 1-2 minutes.
  • Think-Pair-Share:
    • Ask: “What do you see in this picture that doesn’t belong in the ocean?” (Prompt to notice plastic items)
    • Students first think individually, then discuss with a partner.
    • Call on 3-4 pairs to share their observations aloud.
  • Introduce the key question: “How Does Plastic Get into Our Oceans and Why Is It a Problem?”

2. Explain & Investigate (15 minutes)

  • Brief teacher-led discussion explaining:
    • How plastic enters oceans (littering, rivers, fishing, packaging waste).
    • Negative impacts (harm to animals, pollution of water, disruption of food chains).
  • Show concrete plastic items. Pass them around to touch and examine while discussing their typical use and disposal.
  • Group Sorting Activity (in groups of 4, 6 groups total):
    • Using small bins/boxes, they sort mixed waste items (plastic, paper, organic) to reinforce recycling concepts and the ‘right place for waste’.
  • Each group receives a simplified fact sheet on specific impacts of plastic pollution to discuss and summarise.

3. Elaborate and Create (10 minutes)

  • Groups use flipchart paper and markers to create a mini-poster answering:
    • What causes plastic pollution in our ocean?
    • What are the impacts?
    • What actions can we take as individuals or a community?
  • Encourage drawing as well as keywords and short phrases.
  • Provide sticky notes/cards for students to write personal “take action” ideas (e.g., using reusable bottles, cleaning beaches) to add to group posters.

4. Share and Reflect (5 minutes)

  • Groups briefly present their posters to the class.
  • Teacher summarises key points and highlights how each student can be a ‘plastic pollution warrior’.
  • Friend pairs share one thing they will do after the lesson to help reduce plastic pollution.

Assessment & Evaluation

  • Formative: Observation of group discussion, participation in sorting activity, quality and accuracy of group posters.
  • Summative: Oral presentation of group work; peer reflection on personal “take action” statements.
  • Teacher notes: Use a simple checklist assessing understanding of causes, impacts, and personal actions, plus collaborative skills.

Differentiation

  • Supports: Provide vocabulary cards with key terms (e.g., pollution, recycling, marine life). Pair students strategically for peer support.
  • Extension: Challenge advanced students to suggest school-wide or community projects to reduce plastic waste.

Cross-Curricular Links

  • Science: Understanding ecosystems and human impact on environments.
  • Civic and Social Education: Encouraging responsibility and active citizenship in environmental care.
  • English: Developing oral communication and collaborative skills.

Extra WOW Factor Ideas for Teachers

  • Use a “Plastic Ocean Mystery Box” containing hidden plastic items for tactile exploration during explanation.
  • Show a short, age-appropriate video clip (if technology permits) to bring real-world images of ocean plastic pollution alive.
  • Invite students to bring in their own examples of plastic waste at home as homework preparation for a future lesson on recycling.

This detailed lesson plan combines concrete, interactive learning with curriculum-aligned objectives to engage young learners in one of today’s most critical environmental issues. It fosters knowledge, skills, and values for responsible global citizenship.

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