Rainforest Conservation
CONCEPTUALKnow the main approaches to rainforest conservation — protected areas and national parks, reforestation and rewilding programmes, sustainable certification schemes (Rainforest Alliance, FSC), recognition of indigenous land rights as the most effective form of forest protection, and international agreements like REDD+ that pay countries to keep forests standing
Mastery Evidence
- Name at least three conservation approaches: protected areas, reforestation, sustainable certification, and indigenous land rights
- Explain why protecting indigenous territories is one of the most effective ways to prevent deforestation
- Describe what certification labels like Rainforest Alliance or FSC mean and how they help
Assessment Prompt
“Can [child] describe what people are doing to save the rainforests — like creating nature reserves, planting new trees, supporting indigenous land rights, and buying certified sustainable products?”
Prerequisites2
- Deforestation Causes & ScalehardAges 9—11
- Indigenous Ecological KnowledgesoftAges 7—9
Show full prerequisite tree
- Deforestation Causes & Scale hard
Must understand the problem (deforestation) before learning about solutions (conservation)
- Where Rainforests Are hard
Must know where rainforests are globally before zooming into the Amazon specifically
- Tropical Rainforest Climate soft
Understanding tropical climate deepens understanding of why the Amazon is so productive
- What Is a Rainforest? hard
Must know what a rainforest is before understanding its tropical climate in detail
- Geography & Local Weather soft
Understanding world weather patterns helps understand tropical climate (Weather 7-9 -> Rainforests 7-9)
- Days, Weeks, Months & Years soft
Observing and describing seasonal changes requires basic date and time vocabulary (months, seasons, year)
- Ordering Events in Time hard
Understanding days/months/years builds on sequencing events chronologically
- Rainforest Biodiversity hard
Must understand biodiversity value before understanding what deforestation destroys
- The Amazon Rainforest soft
The Amazon as a specific example grounds the abstract concept of biodiversity hotspots
- Where Rainforests Are hard
Must know where rainforests are globally before zooming into the Amazon specifically
- Tropical Rainforest Climate soft
Understanding tropical climate deepens understanding of why the Amazon is so productive
- What Is a Rainforest? hard
Must know what a rainforest is before understanding its tropical climate in detail
- Geography & Local Weather soft
Understanding world weather patterns helps understand tropical climate (Weather 7-9 -> Rainforests 7-9)
- Days, Weeks, Months & Years soft
Observing and describing seasonal changes requires basic date and time vocabulary (months, seasons, year)
- Ordering Events in Time hard
Understanding days/months/years builds on sequencing events chronologically
- Classifying Rainforest Organisms hard
Understanding classification helps appreciate the scale of biodiversity
- Rainforest Layers hard
Plants taught in context of layers (epiphytes in canopy, lianas climbing trunks)
- Changing Environments soft
Deforestation is a powerful example of environmental change posing dangers to living things (exploratory age 9 -> curriculum age 8). Exploratory depends on curriculum.
- Habitats & Basic Needs hard
Must understand how habitats support organisms before understanding what happens when they change
- Where Are the Poles? soft
Polar regions enrich the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- Habitat Vocabulary hard
Describing how habitats provide for basic needs requires habitat, environment, conditions, shelter vocabulary
- What Is a Rainforest? soft
Rainforest habitat knowledge enriches the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- What Living Things Need hard
Must know basic needs of organisms before understanding how habitats provide for those needs
- Living Things Vocabulary soft
Describing what plants and animals need to survive uses life processes vocabulary: nutrition, growth, sensitivity
- Living, Dead & Never Alive hard
Must distinguish living from non-living before understanding habitats that support living things
- Living Things Vocabulary hard
Comparing living, dead, and never-been-alive things requires the life processes vocabulary to give reasons
- Common minibeasts: naming and recognising hard
Must recognise common minibeasts before exploring where each type lives
- Simple Food Chains soft
Food chain knowledge helps understand knock-on effects of environmental change
- Herbivores, Carnivores & Omnivores hard
Must know carnivore/herbivore/omnivore to understand food chains
- Habitats & Basic Needs hard
Must know about habitats and interdependence before learning food chains
- Where Are the Poles? soft
Polar regions enrich the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- Habitat Vocabulary hard
Describing how habitats provide for basic needs requires habitat, environment, conditions, shelter vocabulary
- What Is a Rainforest? soft
Rainforest habitat knowledge enriches the curriculum habitats topic (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- What Living Things Need hard
Must know basic needs of organisms before understanding how habitats provide for those needs
- Living Things Vocabulary soft
Describing what plants and animals need to survive uses life processes vocabulary: nutrition, growth, sensitivity
- Living, Dead & Never Alive hard
Must distinguish living from non-living before understanding habitats that support living things
- Living Things Vocabulary hard
Comparing living, dead, and never-been-alive things requires the life processes vocabulary to give reasons
- Common minibeasts: naming and recognising hard
Must recognise common minibeasts before exploring where each type lives
- Ocean Animal Variety soft
Food chains benefit from knowing the variety of animals that eat each other
- Minibeasts in the food chain soft
Garden minibeast food chains provide concrete examples for curriculum simple-food-chains
- Common minibeasts: naming and recognising hard
Must know common minibeasts before placing them in food chains
- Rainforest Animals soft
Rainforest animals provide rich examples for simple food chains (exploratory age 5 -> curriculum age 6)
- Habitat Vocabulary soft
Discussing how environments change and pose dangers uses habitat and conditions vocabulary
- Indigenous Ecological Knowledge soft
Indigenous knowledge and land rights are a key conservation approach
- Indigenous Rainforest Peoples hard
Must know that indigenous peoples live in rainforests before learning about their deep ecological knowledge
- What Is a Rainforest? hard
Must understand what a rainforest is before learning about the people who live there
Unlocks1
- Rainforest Futures & Trade-OffshardAges 9—11