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eFilms on ePals – Educate. Enlighten. Entertain.

ePals brings free eFilms to you and your classroom. Check out the featured eFilm below or browse through all of the eFilm titles on the right. Interact with other ePals educators to exchange thought-provoking questions about film topics, share ways to integrate the films into subjects you teach, and suggest other helpful resources. Come back often to view the latest eFilms!

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Featured eFilm

  • The Waterkeepers

    The heroic efforts of river, bay and soundkeepers from Alaska to North Carolina

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    47 minutes long, released 2007,

    How would you use this film in class?  Leave your comments and rate this video! 

    Synopsis

    Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. leads the nation’s fastest-growing grassroots environmental organization, the Waterkeeper Alliance. Like an environmental “Neighborhood Watch” program, waterkeepers take polluters to court, respond to citizens’ complaints about water pollution, identify problems that affect rivers, bays, lakes and streams; devise appropriate remedies and act as living witnesses to the condition of local ecosystems.  Waterkeepers have helped to clean up and protect hundreds of water bodies around the world from pollution and dirty industries.

    THE WATERKEEPERS chronicles the heroic efforts of river, bay and soundkeepers from Alaska to North Carolina. Their hands-on public advocacy environmentalism has become a model for ecosystem protection: citizens defending the ecosystems in which they live.

    Films About Biodiversity:

    Watch these films, created by professionals, centered around the topic of biodiversity. We have prepared thought-provoking questions for you to ask students what they think about these films. Asign it as homework and let the students enjoy watching a great film while contemplating some ideas about how they can help solve some of the Earth's most pressing issues!

    The Hudson Riverkeepers

    A decades-long battle to
    protect one of the nation's
    great rivers, the Hudson.

     

    Africa: Wilds of Madagascar

    Travel to the island of
    Madagascar to study the exotic
    animals of this wildlife oasis.
    Amazon: Land of the Flooded Forest

    Explore an extraordinary
    region where water and land
    life intermingle.

     

    The Yunnan Great Rivers Expedition

    A whitewater expedition
    through the upper Mekong,
    Salween and Yangtze rivers.
    Posted Apr 06 2009, 06:47 AM by Tim B with 9 comment(s)
  • The Human Footprint

     

    Everything you eat. Everything you drink. Everything you use. Your entire life’s consumption. In one place at one time.

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    Synopsis

    In a playful, surprising and thought-provoking portrait of our time on earth, National Geographic demonstrates, in a series of remarkable visuals, what makes up an average human life today and how everything we do has impact on the world around us. In this unique journey through life, it shows all the people you will ever know, how much waste you will produce, the amount of fuel you'll consume and how much you've got to pack in during your 2,475,526,000 seconds on earth.

    90 minutes long, released 2008,

    How would you use this film in class? Leave a Comment

    Review

    The National Geographic film Human Footprint is an educational film about the effects humans have on our planet. It introduces the concept of an ecological footprint to the viewers and continues, in great detail, about the specific footprint an average American creates throughout his or her lifetime. The movie is geared towards students -- and is especially appropriate for middle school and high school ages -- but would be of interest for elementary age students and adults.

    The film opens with a colorful video montage of the resources people use on a regular basis: gasoline, clothing, trash, food and beverage. The goal is to literally show the viewer how much "stuff" we use over our lifetimes. Our human footprint, defined as the impact each person makes on the earth's resources over his or her lifetime, is depicted in very literal terms. An average person drives 627,000 miles in a lifetime; produces 64 tons of waste; drinks 13,056 pints of milk; 43,371 cans of soda. Parents use an average of nearly 4,000 diapers for each child. And, as we see in the movie, it takes 1,898 pints of crude oil and 715 pounds of plastic and pulp from 4 trees to make those diapers. Detailed analyses of what we consume is both startling and motivating. Pints of milk, loaves of bread, cans of soda are placed side-by-side, creating a striking visual image.

    The positives of this movie are many. It is fast-paced and visually very appealing. It addresses a social problem, but in a manner which breaks the problem down into discrete topics. By doing this, students will able to attack the issue, rather than be overwhelmed. The statistics cited are shocking, but will long be forgotten in the way that numbers usually are. However, the visual accompaniment, (for example, a room filled with oranges, or a football field filled with loaves of bread) won't likely be. The narrator does not have to urge viewers to reduce consumption. The images alone do that.

    If there is a negative, it runs along the notion of information overload. The film covers numerous items that go into our individual ecological footprints. Some students might find that, after a while, things start to blend together. If this causes concern, it is easily fixed. Split the movie up into parts. There are fairly clear stopping points in the movie. It would be easy to either just show portions of the movie that might most pertain to your students. Alternatively, the movie is well-suited to being divided over a few class periods.

    This movie could easily supplement studies on conservation, energy independence, global warming and a wide variety of subjects. It could be accompanied by both in classroom activities and collaboaration with other ePals classrooms. For example, students could chart their "footprint" over a week or a month, or that of their families. They could compare this footprint with those of other classrooms, in rural areas, in other parts of the United States or in other countries throughout the world. The film could be discussed with classrooms on a blog or using email to discuss practical ways to reduce the human footprint, etc.

    All in all, the film provides many clear examples of our human footprint and let's students come to their own conclusions. Students of all ages will find something that relates directly to them...and all stduents can be encouraged to come up with ideas to reduce their own footprints

    Posted Nov 22 2008, 02:54 AM by ePals Administrator with 8 comment(s)


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