Explore Shyla Raghav's Pathway

Lesson 1: Local Action and Global Solutions

We all have ideas about what it means to be a climate scientist. In this lesson, students explore their initial assumptions, examine Shyla Raghav's journey developing respect for the environment and building a strong sensitivity for very human issues related to development and climate, as they get in touch with her work in the context of their own lives.

In this lesson students get warmed up thinking about "who is a climate scientist" through a series of images, before analyzing an interview with Shyla Raghav using a close reading strategy. The students will produce a timeline of Shyla Raghav's journey from a young girl to an expert on the impact of climate change on people and nature. Students are invited to develop a timeline of their own life events as they consider how STEM is relevant in their lives and future path.

Connections to the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS)

Aligning with 3-dimensional teaching and learning

Science and Engineering Practice 8: Obtaining, Evaluating, and Communicating Information.

Any education in science and engineering needs to develop students' ability to read and produce domain-specific text. As such, every science or engineering lesson is in part a language lesson, particularly reading and producing the genres of texts that are intrinsic to science and engineering." (NRC Framework, 2012, p. 76)

Nature of Science is a human endeavor.

Scientific knowledge is a result of human endeavor, imagination, and creativity. Individuals and teams from many nations and cultures have contributed to science and to advances in engineering. Scientists' backgrounds, theoretical commitments, and fields of endeavor influence the nature of their findings. Technological advances have influenced the progress of science and science has influenced advances in technology. Science and engineering are influenced by society and society is influenced by science and engineering." (NGSS Appendix H, 2013, p. 6)

Warm-Up Activity: "Draw a Scientist"

For a "Draw a Scientist" lesson plan from the California Academy of Sciences click here.

If you ask your students to describe a scientist doing science, what might they say? Would they describe a scientist like Shyla Raghav? Or might they describe someone more like scientists they've seen in movies, comic books, and other media? Would they describe a person they know? Would the person they describe be someone they'd want to be like?

In this lesson, students are introduced to Shyla Raghav through her TED Talk: Reimagining climate change and sacrifice. Students then will practice close reading skills on a biographical article on Shyla Raghav from Nautilus Magazine. The article takes readers on a journey from her arrival in the United States from India and Australia to her work in the United Nations. As they read, students collect data from the article that they can use to build a timeline. Later, students revisit the timeline as they think about their own future and interests.

Ask students to draw a scientist. Have them write a short description of their drawing that tells a little bit about the different parts of the drawing. Discuss these drawings, and help students consider what the drawings suggest about things such as what scientists do, how scientists work, where scientists work, and who can be a scientist.

Activity 1: Climate change and sacrifice

As an introduction to Shyla Raghav, encourage your students to watch Shyla Raghav's TED Talk: Reimagining climate change and sacrifice.

Activity 2: A Scientist's Timeline

  • For an article about Shyla Raghav titled A Voice for the Trees Click here.
  • For a lesson plan describing the close read pedagogy: Informational Text Strategies: Close Reading click here

So that students can collect data that will be used to construct a timeline of Shyla Raghav's life, guide students in conducting a close read of the Nautilus article: A Voice for Nature.

Activity 3: Developing a Scientist's Timeline

To make an editable copy of a Google Spreadsheet timeline template click here.

From the data that students collect in the close read of her biography, they can develop a timeline of Shyla Raghav's journey from a young girl to a climate science expert using the template provided or another timeline app.

Timelines can be created using several applications, such as Timeline Editor, Google Drawing, or an Add-on such as Lucidchart.

This timeline activity is intended to enable students to see that the life of a scientist is not so different from their own lives in many ways.

An example of a finished timeline is shown below.

For additional tools that can be used to construct a timeline, see:

Timelines can be created using several applications, such as Timeline Editor, Google Drawing, or an Add-on such as Lucidchart.

This timeline activity is intended to enable students to see that the life of a scientist is not so different from their own lives in many ways.

Activity 4: Personal Timeline

Now that they have considered Shyla Raghav's timeline, students can think about their own interests and the events that may have helped them develop those interests. Then students can project themselves into a possible future and record their ideas on their timeline. What might they see themselves doing as a result of their interests? What new interests might they develop? What role might science and other STEM fields play in those pursuits? How could a person's pursuits be affected by science even if they are not going to become a professional scientist or other STEM worker?

Ask each student to create a timeline for their own past and possible future.

To hear Shyla Raghav's thoughts on the role climate scientists can play in climate policy, watch: The Hidden Impacts of Climate Change, a video that was recorded while Shyla was a United Nations Delegate

Do you have an example of a sign of our changing climate that is similar to one Shyla Raghav talked about in the video?

Activity 5: Reflection activity

Now that students have had an opportunity to journey along the pathway of a climate scientist like Shyla Raghav, it's time to reflect again on their personal perceptions of scientists. Consider the images in this array of places where scientists might work.

Corals
Tropical Outcrop

Do places like this come to mind when you think of where scientists work?

Consider each place shown.