Strangers in Their Own Land
Lesson Information
Age: Grades 4-12
Duration: Several 45-minute periods
Group Size: Pairs or small groups
Materials: Survey form; Internet access (optional)
Summary: Students use interview techniques to explore
the traditional wisdom of fishers, farmers, First Nations,
and other peoples whose close relationship with nature gives
them a deeper understanding of, and sensitivity toward, climatic
cycles and events.
Learning Objectives:
Students will:
- appreciate the value of traditional knowledge in understanding
the impacts of climate change on nature;
- identify factors that determine people's perceptions
of ecological shifts;
- develop insight by compiling and contemplating survey
results of observations by people who live in a close relationship
with our lands and waters; and
- recognize how traditional expertise may complement scientific
research and heighten our awareness of climatic changes
and their effects.
Background
There is great uncertainty concerning the rate and extent
of climate change across Canada as well as its current and
forecasted impacts. Many gaps in scientific knowledge may
be filled by the wisdom of seafarers, fishers, farmers, First
Nations, and other peoples who, for generations, have lived
in a close relationship with our lands and waters.
Traditional knowledge is a rich source of local environmental
know-how, climate history, and insight into past, present,
and future ecological shifts. It can help scientists formulate
questions and hypotheses about climate change and provide
information on historical adaptations to similar challenges.
Traditional knowledge also offers insight into how climate
change may affect different cultures, particularly those that
are closely associated with ecologically sensitive regions,
such as prairies, coastlines, and the North.
Procedure
- Ask your students to describe their region's climate,
taking into account such factors as temperature, precipitation,
seasonal changes, and proximity to the ocean, large lakes,
and mountains.

- Then, have each student list ways in which climate affects
his or her community. For example, fall weather brings salmon
upstream and allows us to fish, winter snow makes it possible
to ski, spring rain floods the fields where we grow crops,
the break-up of sea ice in summer brings bowhead whales
close to shore.
- Next, ask the class to identify cultural features, like
diet, dress, art, and religion, that may have developed
as adaptations to their area, its climate, and wildlife
inhabitants.
- Have your students make judgments (based on their own
observations) as to whether the local climate has changed
in their lifetimes. If so, in what ways? Ask each student
to write a brief composition describing changes that may
have occurred and cultural influences that may affect his
or her views on climate.
- Now, lead a discussion about the accuracy of these observations
of climate change, emphasizing how cultural differences
and the passage of time affect people's views of the world.
- Tell your students they are going to design a survey that
investigates human perceptions of climate change while keeping
people's lifestyles in mind. Divide the class into pairs
or small groups to draft questions. The aim is to interview
people particularly seafarers, fishers, farmers,
First Nations, and older community members who live in close
proximity to nature to learn if they have noticed
any changes in climate during their lives. When each group
has finished, bring the class back together to choose which
questions to include in the survey and how best to present
them. Survey questions might include:
- How long have you lived here?
- What do you do for a living? Has your work changed?
- Do you spend a lot of time in nature? Do you spend
as much time in nature today as you did in the past?
- Has the local climate changed in your lifetime? How?
Please respond to the following statements:
- Compared to the past, today's summer temperatures are:
much hotter / somewhat hotter / the same / somewhat cooler
/ much cooler
- Compared to the past, today's winter temperatures are:
much colder / somewhat colder / the same / somewhat milder
/ much milder
- Compared to the past, bird migration today occurs:
much earlier / somewhat earlier / at the same time / somewhat
later / much later
- Compared to the past, the break-up of sea ice now occurs:
much earlier / somewhat earlier / at the same time / somewhat
later / much later
- Your lifestyle today is affected by climate.
strongly agree / agree / not sure/ disagree / strongly disagree
- Your lifestyle in the past was affected by climate.
strongly agree / agree / not sure/ disagree / strongly disagree
- More snow falls today than in the past.
strongly agree / agree / not sure/ disagree / strongly disagree
- It rains more today than in the past.
strongly agree / agree / not sure/ disagree / strongly disagree
- Each student should interview several long-term members
of the community who have spent a lot of time out of doors.
Then, have the class share survey outcomes and compare and
analyze the results. Your students may want to compile the
data in a chart that indicates the average response to each
survey question.
- Ask your students to summarize the survey results in an
article addressing the relevance, consistency, patterns,
and other analyses of people's perceptions of climate change.
Were responses similar or highly divergent? Were there any
patterns that reflected respondents' lifestyles, occupations,
and cultural differences?
Extension
Once your students have summarized the survey results, they
can compare the data to the "Common Sense Climate Index"
for their region. Have them visit www.giss.nasa.gov/data/update/csci/
and click on "World and U.S. Maps." They
can click anywhere on the map and bring up the climate index
for the station closest to them. Do your students' survey
results and the climate index agree? Ask your class to comment
on the similarities and differences.
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