How much water does your family use?

Updated: February 9, 2007

Lesson plan

The following lesson may fit well in an environmental education unit on conservation. During this lesson, students will examine the amount of water their family uses on a typical Saturday, record the information in a Microsoft Office Excel template, and analyze and compare their water usage to that of others in the class.

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Lesson plan informationLesson plan information
Teacher guideTeacher guide
Resources and Web linksResources and Web links
Student activityStudent activity
Ways to extend the student activityWays to extend the student activity
AssessmentAssessment

Lesson plan information

Lesson plan
ItemRequirements

Instructional level

Beginning user

Intermediate user

School level

Middle school (11-14 years)

High school (14-18 years)

Curriculum areas

Mathematics

Science: Environmental studies

Environmental studies

Thinking and reasoning

Themes

Environment

Conservation

Class time

2-3 class periods

Academic standards

Science: Recognize the components, structure, and organization of systems, and the interconnections in and among them.

Math: Understand and apply concepts and procedures from probability and statistics.

ISTE NETS Standards for students

Students use technology resources to solve problems and make informed decisions.

Students use technology to locate, evaluate, and collect information from a variety of sources.

Students use technology tools to process data and report results.

Software required

Microsoft Office Excel

Microsoft Internet Explorer

Microsoft Office PowerPoint

Microsoft Office Publisher

Teacher guide

Objectives

Students will determine the amount of water their family uses.

Students will compare the amount of water used in their families to that used in other families.

Students will identify ways they can decrease family water usage.

Prerequisite skills

Basic experience using Microsoft Office Excel

Basic skills using Microsoft Internet Explorer

Basic skills using Microsoft PowerPoint

How to begin

1.

Bring a gallon of water to your classroom (a gallon-sized milk carton will work). Show your students the gallon of water to help them visualize the volume in one gallon.

2.

Brainstorm all of the things that families do that use water.

3.

Ask the students to estimate and write down how much water they think their family uses on a cold, rainy Saturday when everyone is at home.

4.

Tell students they will do an activity that teaches them how to determine the total number of gallons their family uses.

Resources and Web links

Excel water usage worksheet template (36 KB Microsoft Excel file)

U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Web site

Student activity

Description

In this activity, you will follow a series of steps to determine how much water your family uses, record your findings in an Excel spreadsheet, and then write a report analyzing your findings.

Step 1: Determine your family's water usage

Software: Microsoft Office Excel, Microsoft Internet Explorer, Microsoft Office Word

What to do

Determine your family's water usage and report on your findings

1.

Open the Excel water usage worksheet template (36 KB Microsoft Excel file) on your computer.

2.

Save the worksheet, and use your first name and last initial as the document title.

3.

Open Internet Explorer, and visit the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Web site.

4.

Review and answer the questions about water usage. Be sure to record your answers on your Excel worksheet and also on the Web site. You will use the worksheet to compare and analyze your family water usage when you show it to your classmates.

5.

Record the total number of gallons of water.

6.

Go to the Water Usage Chart tab at the bottom of your Excel worksheet. Print your chart.

7.

Open a new Word document, and then answer the following questions about your water usage:

What activity uses the most water for your family?

What is the average number of gallons each member of your family used?

What three things can you do to reduce the amount of water used at your house?

How does your water usage compare to others in your class?

Step 2: Present your recommendations

Software: Microsoft Office PowerPoint

What to do

Create a PowerPoint presentation to share your recommendations based on your research

1.

Open PowerPoint.

2.

Create slides that communicate three ways your family can use less water at home.

Ways to extend the student activity

Have students use Excel to create a bar chart.

If you have a highly technical group of students, have them start with a blank Excel worksheet where they can create their own formulas and charts.

Have students make a water conservation brochure using Microsoft Office Publisher.

Assessment

Students can be assessed on:

The Word document they submit.

Their PowerPoint presentation that shows three ways they can use less water at home.

Innovative teaching

Microsoft newsletters for educators

ISTE National Educational Technology Standards for Students

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