Activity
At-a-Glance
Time:
30 minutes
Materials:
- Gallon jug filled with water
- Paper and pens
Physical Setting:
A room large enough for participants to divide into small groups
Sequence:
- 5 minutes for students to estimate how much water they use
- 15 minutes to discuss actual water usage
- 10 minutes for processing
Age:
- 12-18
Philanthropy is:
- Giving, serving and private citizen action intended for the common good.
Purpose:
- Participants will learn about the water supply and understand the importance of water conservation. Youth will understand that water conservation and environmental stewardship are philanthropic actions.
Objectives:
The young person will:- understand the importance of water conservation for the common good.
- identify the many uses of water in our daily lives.
- determine the amount of water that is used in various ways, what uses are necessities and what may not be.
- understand that the water supply is limited.
- identify preserving our environment as a philanthropic act.
Religious Activity Theme:
Deuteronomy 20:19 (The Message)
When you mount an attack on a town and the siege goes on a long time, don't start cutting down the trees, swinging your axes against them. Those trees are your future food; don't cut them down. Are trees soldiers who come against you with weapons?
Chief Seattle, leader of the Suquamish tribe in the Pacific Northwest, most famous for his 1854 speech on environmentalism
“We did not weave the web of life; we are merely a strand in it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves.”
Activity Steps:
- Begin by asking participants to estimate how many gallons of water each of them uses every day. Have participants write down their estimates and put them aside for future reference.
- Divide the participants into small groups of 3-4 each. Ask them to brainstorm all the ways they can think of that they use water every day. Compile a complete list of the answers the groups make. Ask the youth to share the amounts they estimated at the beginning of class.
- Distribute Attachment One—Common Water Uses and Amounts (scroll to bottom of page to view) showing statistics of how much water various activities use. Using a gallon jug, explain that two-thirds of the people in the world use just thirteen gallons of water each day. Ask how this compares with their estimates. Explain that the average American uses approximately 100-105 gallons of water each day. Attachment One also provides the group with statistics that show the amount of water it takes to produce several common items we use every day such as a tomato, a gallon of milk, energy to light a light bulb and production of newsprint. Ask for reactions to these statistics.
- Ask the participants to guess how much of the earth’s water is available for use by humans and animals. After several estimates, explain that only three percent of the total amount of the earth’s water is fresh water; and of that three percent, only one percent is actually available for our use. The rest is too deep underground or locked up in ice caps.
- Explain that being careful about using natural resources, including water, is called conservation, which is a form of environmental stewardship. Discuss the importance of stewardship in the group’s faith tradition.
Processing Questions:
- Why do you think water conservation is important?
- Why do you think Americans use more water than the people from other nations?
- What are some ways that you can conserve water everyday?
- What surprised you the most about what you discovered in this activity?
- What else would you like to learn about the earth’s supply of water?
- How can you use your time, talents and/or treasures to help protect the environment for the common good?
- In the Deut. passage it says “those trees are your future” how is water our future?
- What are some ways in which we waste water?
- What are some ways that a faith community could support water conservation? (Think corporately and individually)
- How does or can media, movies, and pop-culture play a positive role?
Variation:
Read and discuss key thoughts and ideas from the speech given by Chief Seattle, Leader of the Susquamish Nation, and compare its relevancy to today’s world. Are we listening? What else can we do? (Note: the speech can be found on the Internet or at the local library in this book:Seattle, Chief. Brother Eagle, Sister Sky: A Message from Chief Seattle. Dial Books for Young Readers. ISBN: 0803709692
Plan your own Earth Day for your youth group, community or school. Learn about the first Earth Day held in the late 70’s—and how it still relates to the youth of today. This is a great way to do an inter-generational project. Notify the local media. Do your research, planning, prepare ways for people to get involved, learn and have fun. Then make sure you serve as a good role model for your community. People will follow what you do, not what you say!
Supplemental Activity:
Provide Attachment Two—Recording Sheet for Water Usage (scroll to bottom of page to view) for participants to record the amount of water they use for the next 24 hours. Findings can be briefly discussed at the next group meeting.Activity Source:
Adapted from Learning to Give Lesson (Grades
6-8) “Where
Has all the Water Gone”
Unit “Water
Resources and the Role of the Independent Sector”
Additional Resources:
Native Americans
Learning to Give Lesson (Grades 3-5) “First
Conservationists”
Unit “Real
Heroes”
Native Americans
Learning to Give Lesson (Grades 3-5) “Native
Americans and Giving”
Unit “How
Did We Help”
Recycling
Learning to Give Lesson (Grades 3-5) “Reduce,
Reuse, Recycle!”
Unit “Earth
Connections”
The Message (MSG)
Copyright © 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2000, 2001, 2002 by Eugene H. Peterson
Attachment One
Common Water Uses and Amounts
Directions: Use this list to get a reasonable estimate of the amount of water used for each of the following activities:
| Washing Hands | 1/4 gallon per minute |
| Showering | 30 gallons per 10 minutes |
| Bath | 40 gallons |
| Brushing teeth | 1-2 gallons |
| Washing a car | 20 gallons |
| Flushing a toilet | 3.5 to 5 gallons/use, (low flow toilets 1.6 gallons) |
| Washing dishes by hand | 20 gallons |
| Washing dishes w/ dishwasher | 10 gallons |
| Laundry | 30 gallons per load |
| Drinking Water | 1/2 gallon per day |
| Watering lawn | 240 gallons (30 minutes) |
How Much Water Does It Take?
- It takes 4,000 gallons of water to generate enough electricity to light a 100-watt light bulb for 10 hours.
- To produce the newsprint that newspapers use each day, it takes 300 million gallons of water.
- To produce one gallon of milk, a cow must consume four gallons of water.
- Eight gallons of water are needed to grow one tomato.
Attachment Two
Recording Sheet for Water Usage
| Activity | Frequency | Amount of Water Used/Use | Total Water Used |
| Drinking | |||
| Showering/Bathing | |||
| Brushing Teeth | |||
| Dish Washing | |||
| Flushing Toilets | |||
| Other |
How does your water usage compare to that of the average person in the United States?
What are three things you and your family can do to help conserve water?
Philanthropy Theme Framework :
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