Human Population
By Susan
Stempleski
Human
Population
has been selected as the theme
of the third chapter of this volume on Environmental Education because
it is timely, provocative, and of universal importance. "Of all the
issues we face as the new millennium nears, none is more important than
population growth. The numbers speak for themselves" (Swerdlow, 1998,
p. 4). In October 1999 the world's population reached 6 billion, and
that number is growing by almost 90 million people a year.
The introductory lesson described
here is designed as a starting point for teachers interested in introducing
the topic of human population to their students. By reading about and
discussing the topic of human population, students increase their awareness
of population issues. They also learn new vocabulary and concepts associated
with the topic, and they practice language skills in a meaningful way.
The lesson opens with a short
"World Population Quiz." Next, students read and discuss an article
describing some major issues related to population and the environment.
The lesson continues with a whole-class discussion in which students
share their personal views on population issues. Finally, students write
a brief summary of what they have learned in the lesson. Some teachers
will want to use the proposed activities as a single 50-minute lesson.
Others may choose to combine some or all the activities with other materials
to create a larger teaching unit.

Background Information
On October 12, 1999, the United
Nations declared that Earth's population had reached 6 billion. Of these
6 billion people, more than one-third live in either one or the other
of two countries: India with its population of 1 billion, or China with
its population of 1.2 billion.
World population first reached
one billion in the year 1804. It took 123 years to reach go from one
to two billion, but it took only 12 years to go from five to six billion.
Since 1950 the population growth rates of the less
developed countries have risen very rapidly, and they are
now much higher than those of the more
developed countries. As a result, most population growth
in the past 50 years has been in the poorer areas of the world. Today
98 percent of population growth occurs in the less developed countries,
where the benefits of health care, education, family
planning, and economic opportunities are least available.
At first glance the effects
of population growth on the environment seem obvious. More people use
more resources, damage more of the earth, and create more pollution.
As the population of a country increases, so does its consumption.
Because of this, we might expect the poorer nations, which have the
highest populations and the fastest rates of population growth, to cause
the most damage to the environment. The truth is more complicated than
that.
The greatest danger to the
environment comes not just from poor people in developing countries
who damage their resources in order to find food and housing. An equally
big danger comes from the richest people, who use the most resources
and create the most pollution. In addition, there are all the other
people in between who increase their consumption as they try to improve
their standard
of living.
Reducing population growth
rates does not solve all population problems. At the beginning of the
20th century, most of the world's people lived in the countryside. Today
nearly half of them live in cities, and the fastest growing cities are
in the less developed countries. As more people move to the cities,
they use more resources and create more pollution. What other environmental
problems could occur as more and more people crowd into cities?
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