https://open.alberta.ca/feeds/custom.atom?tags=education&res_format=PDF&pubtype=Educational+MaterialOpen Government - Custom query2024-03-29T04:51:47.982359+00:00Alberta Open Governmentpython-feedgenRecently created or updated datasets on Open Government. Custom query: 'culture and tourism'https://open.alberta.ca/dataset/806b0b76-da1b-4031-843b-91f5368a9e7aCoal mining : life & times2015-11-23T21:04:32.634239+00:00This publication is part of a series of field study programs produced by the Environmental Education Program of Natural Resources Service in Kananaskis Country and Fish Creek Provincial Park. The publications have been written to address the mission of Alberta Environment and increase students’ environmental awareness, understanding, interaction and responsibility for the natural world in which they live. The publications are developed in a close working relationship with teachers, community educators and program writers. Programs focus on the areas of environmental education, science, social studies and language arts. They are also developed to emphasize elements of environmental literacy, lifestyle, and citizenship.2015-11-23T21:04:03.138042+00:00https://open.alberta.ca/dataset/427b0909-c56e-4a4b-a72b-a3f16fea4f85Animal life cycles field study planning guide2015-12-02T19:12:56.274559+00:00Welcome to the teacher’s planning and activity package for Animal Life Cycles. This halfday program was developed to offer students a natural environment experience that supports both the Grade 3 Alberta Elementary Science Curriculum Topic E: Animal Life Cycles and the goals of Alberta Parks: • Preservation – to preserve in perpetuity a network of parks and protected areas that represent the diversity of the province’s natural heritage as well as related cultural heritage. • Heritage appreciation – to provide opportunities to explore, understand and appreciate the natural heritage of Alberta, and enhance public awareness and our relationship to and dependence on it. • Outdoor recreation – to provide a variety of natural landscape dependent outdoor recreation opportunities and related facilities and services. • Heritage tourism – to encourage residents and visitors to the province to discover and enjoy the natural heritage of Alberta through a variety of outdoor recreation and nature based tourism opportunities, facilities and accommodation services.2015-11-03T21:06:35.372674+00:00https://open.alberta.ca/dataset/5bb0e2dc-8d01-49c4-852f-5d395b43f98dBugology I and II field planning guide2019-11-26T20:10:33.172656+00:00Welcome to the teacher’s planning and activity package for Bugology I. This half-day program was developed to offer students a natural environment experience that supports both the Grade 2 Alberta Elementary Science Curriculum Topic E: Small Crawling and Flying Animals and the goals of Alberta Parks: preservation, heritage appreciation, outdoor recreation, and heritage tourism.2015-11-03T20:53:44.649374+00:00https://open.alberta.ca/dataset/39de8cb1-4485-4545-ab22-874db94589e4Freshwater monitoring : a case study : an educational field study for Grade 8 and 9 students2024-02-26T17:58:53.796137+00:00This is a curriculum-connected full-day study of the Elbow River with multidisciplinary preparatory and post-activity support. The intent of this program is to provide a hands-on, engaging outdoor component, which will meet the needs of grades 8, Unit E: Freshwater and Saltwater Systems and grade 9, Unit C: Environmental Chemistry. This program is also written to achieve the mandate of the Alberta Government - Tourism, Parks, and Recreation and also addresses the four program goals of preservation, outdoor recreation, heritage appreciation, and heritage tourism. The preparatory activities are designed to prepare students for an off-site visit to the Elbow River. The preparatory activities focus on introducing students to the watershed monitoring area, related vocabulary, to water testing procedures, and to the expectations of safe and appropriate student behaviour within a protected area. These activities also attempt to further students‟ ability to make predictions, and encourage them to develop a non-biased awareness of the variety of human impacts affecting the watershed. The field study is designed on the belief that “our rivers are an expression of our landscape.” Students are challenged to predict and then discover just what it is that the river is expressing. Students will have the opportunity to monitor the Elbow River from the pristine waters of Cobble Flats in Kananaskis Country all the way to the City of Calgary. Traveling by bus, students will stop at key locations and test the water for dissolved oxygen, nitrates, phosphates, pH, turbidity, temperature, and biotic features. They will also have an opportunity to observe and discuss complex land uses.2015-11-24T17:13:12.376903+00:00