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Lesson Plans

  • Be Cool... Stay Cool

    Be Cool... Stay Cool

    A role-playing activity about the effect of the changing environment on people and wildlife in Canada's North.

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  • Maintain a Wildlife Haven

    2025-11-24

    A little maintenance goes a long way. Just by cleaning up an area, removing competing vegetation, and adding water, you're contributing to the greening of Canada — and you're helping wildlife!

  • Maintain Wild Spaces

    2025-11-24

    Maintain wild spaces.

  • Make a Green Plan for Wildlife

    2025-11-24

    From caribou to robins to butterflies, a host of creatures will respond to your planting plan if it includes the habitat components they need for survival.

  • Make a World of Difference

    2025-11-24

    In many parts of the world, we’re using resources faster than they can be replenished. To stop this, we must start now to manage the planet’s resources so that they can continue to keep us and future generations alive. But how do we do this?

  • Make Waves

    2025-11-24

    Just as our seas sustain us, we must sustain our seas.

  • Make Way for Wild Migrants

    2025-11-24

    Sometimes called the lifeblood of the Earth, migration is like a vast circulation system that pumps blood toward the Earth's poles in spring and back toward the equator in fall.

  • Make Your Project Happen

    2025-11-24

    Creating habitat for migrants is simple if you develop your project in stages and if it is driven by student initiative.

  • Making Maps for Birds

    2025-11-24

    There are endless ways to make maps that will help our feathered friends as well as help students learn about them.

  • Map that Habitat

    2025-11-24

    Students select an area to map with birds in mind. They will map bird-friendly physical features, such as cavity nesting trees, food sources, sheltering trees, and water, as well as threats such as cats, pesticide-treated grass, and polluted water.

  • Microhabitat Projects

    2025-11-24

    With a little planning, physically and mentally challenged students can help bring habitat back to health.