In this lesson, students research Indigenous sustainability leaders and create a comic strip representing these leaders and their key messages.
Step 1 - Inquire: Students access prior knowledge of effective stories and consider what defines a 7th Generation Superhero.
Step 2 - Investigate: Students deepen their understanding of 7th Generation Superheroes and Indigenous sustainability.
Step 3 - Inspire: Students create a comic strip involving characters based on Indigenous climate heroes.
Positives
This lesson aligns with Hawai'i's Nā Hopena A'o HĀ-BREATH Framework.
Students use creativity and imagination to develop new stories.
Students feel connected to the youth activists they are researching because they are young people from a variety of cultural backgrounds.
Students can choose to present their information in a digital or hand-drawn format.
Additional Prerequisites
This is lesson 2 of 2 in our 11th-12th grade Climate Superheroes unit.
Students should have an understanding of basic story structure: exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution or denouement.
Teachers should be familiar with the following ōlelo (Hawaiian language):
Ahupua'a: watershed
Differentiation
Students can share their comics in a physical gallery walk for an added movement break or a shared slideshow for movement-impaired students.
Teachers can use the following scaffolding options as needed:
Read aloud the article and accompanying written resources.
Provide sentence stems for students to guide them through the comic writing section.
Allow students to complete the written portion through the Google Docs talk-to-text feature.
Ensure closed captioning is enabled for all videos.
Teacher can assign the following enrichment options:
The need to include Indigenous peoples' stories, thoughts, sustainable solutions, and voices in international climate debates is emphasized in this lesson as well as their involvement in the battle against climate change. It is crucial to highlight the work that Indigenous climate activists and leaders are doing in their communities to combat climate change, and this is something that should be emulated. This lesson passed our science review after the lesson materials were fact-checked.
This resource addresses the listed standards. To fully meet standards, search for more related resources.
This lesson is aligned to SubjectToClimate standards. Review the aligned standards directly in the lesson plan document and teacher slideshow.
Discover more on SubjectToClimate.