People and the Environment | Uncovering America

PBS Learning Media
Contributed By
PBS Learning Media
Resource Type
Classroom Material
Keywords
environment environmentalism Havell Audubon Passenger Pigeon Middleton Crown Point Press Asa Muir-Harmony Emily York Ianne Kjorlie Requiem photogravure Inness Lackawanna Valley Rau Susquehanna at Standing Stone albumen oil painting painting Ryder Atlantic Great Western Railway railroad transportation Church Niagara panorama George Barker Frederick Law Oldsted Moran Tower at Tower Falls Yellowstone National Park Watkins Grizzly Giant Mariposa Grove forest Yosemite protected park National Park Service Bosse Construction of Rock and Brush Dam L.W. cyanotype Sambunaris Untitled Bingham Copper Mine Utah chromogenic map photography Mississippi River dam National HIstoric Landmark Homer Hound and Hunter hounding Bellows Lone Tenement Baltz Night Construction Reno silver print construction development Sheeler Classic Landscape Ford Motor Company River Rogue Plant Dearborn Michigan Bryson Dust lithograph The Vanishing American Frontier Resettlement Administration overfarming Dust Bowl Roosevelt Wood Haying paperboard hardboard Iowa Minneapolis Chicago Adams Tetons and the Snake River Grand Teton National Park Wyoming national park conservation Sierra Club landscape US United States Smithson Gorgoni earthwork Spiral Jetty Great Salt Lake Land Art Misrach Flooded Marina Gas Pumps Salton Sea California Brandt Salton Sea C1 flooding Rocky Flats Mesa Colorado Adams Decaying remains of an old-growth stump last evidence original forest Clatsop County Oregon deforestation Untitled New Orleans Gulf Coast Louisiana Hurricane Katrina natural disaster climate climate change
Subjects
History-Social Science The Arts
Grade Levels
Kindergarten Grade 1 Grade 2 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 Grade 6 Grade 7 Grade 8 Grade 9 Grade 10 Grade 11 Grade 12 Post-Secondary
Audience
Classroom Teacher / Educator
Related Resources

People and the Environment | Uncovering America

In what ways have Americans impacted the environment? What is our collective responsibility toward the earth and each other? How do artists engage with these questions through works of art? In this resource students will explore and analyze how American places and climates have been depicted over time.

In suggested activities, students examine how natural environments are depicted in works of art in comparison with works of poetry, and conduct community science research to inform both a science project and an art project to communicate their findings.

Publisher
PBS Learning Media

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