LIGHT POLLUTION IN OUR ENVIRONMENT

Lesson Objectives:

At the end of the workshop, students will be able to:

  • Define light pollution

  • Understand how stars are less visible where there are more human-made lights in the environment

  • Understand how common human activities (turning on porch lights, street lights, etc.) can negatively affect other living things in our local environment

  • Understand how nocturnal animals need the dark to survive

Essential Questions:

  • What is light pollution?

  • Why can’t we see as many stars in the sky at night?

  • How does light pollution affect plants and animals?

  • What can we do to prevent light pollution?


Explore our resources

Click on the images to access each resource (available as a PDF or webpage)

Take-Home Guide

Information for parents & legal guardians (available in English and Spanish).

Información para padres de familia y tutores legales (disponible en Inglés y Español).

Standards Alignments

Explore the ways our program aligns with CCSS + NGSS standards.

Vocabulary

Quiz your students on vocabulary used during our lesson!

 

Video Resources

Explore relevant videos about light pollution and nocturnal animals here!

Infographic

Learn how light pollution impacts animals.

Social Emotional Learning

Watch Borrowed Light and reflect with your students.

 

Reading Resources

Explore our staff picks for your students!

Activity: Keep the Lights Off at Home!

Color a starry scene on a poster to help remember to turn the lights off at home.

FPC Reading List Pick

Read these FPC picks + complete reflection activities with your students!

Challenge: Teacher Guide

Download this page to help your students complete their challenge.

Challenge: Student Coloring book

Print this story book for you students to color and take home!

Lesson Reflection

Print and send home this reflection activity to show families what their student learned.

 

Background Information

What is Light Pollution?

Noise is an invisible form of pollution that can cause some major problems. Defined by the EPA as "unwanted or disturbing sounds," noise pollution contributes to negative health outcomes such as high blood pressure, stress-related illness, sleep disturbance, and hearing loss. Examples of noise pollution include construction work, air and road traffic noise, and even noisy pets.

Why Do We Care?

Noise pollution can cause problems for animals and their habitats as well. Human-generated noise has been shown to cause caterpillars' "hearts" (called dorsal vessels in insects) to beat faster and lead bluejays to have fewer chicks. In the oceans, animals like whales and dolphins are severely impacted when noises from ships impair their ability to communicate.