Students explore the science of climate modelling, discovering how positive and negative feedback loops determine the sensitivity of the climate to changes in greenhouse gas concentrations.
Tap a step to mark it as done.
Teach: feedback, positive feedback, negative feedback, albedo, permafrost, tipping point, model, uncertainty. The distinction between positive feedback (amplifying) and negative feedback (dampening) is critical — and counterintuitive since positive sounds good.
Focus on two or three feedback loops rather than attempting to cover all of them. Depth of understanding one feedback loop is more valuable than surface coverage of six.
Can students explain the ice-albedo feedback loop as a complete causal chain? Can they distinguish between positive and negative feedback and give one example of each in the climate system?
No resources needed. Draw simple feedback diagrams in soil showing the causal chain of each loop.
Students often think positive feedback means good feedback. In the climate context, positive feedback amplifies warming — it is the mechanism by which small initial changes can have large eventual effects. The word positive means self-reinforcing, not beneficial.
Climate feedback loops explain why climate change is not proportional to CO2 increase — the system amplifies initial changes. Understanding feedbacks is essential for interpreting climate science and evaluating proposed solutions.
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