Exxon Valdez

Grade Level:

Middle and High 

Overview:This lesson highlights the Exxon Valdez story, including a photograph presentation, maps, personal stories, and Supreme Court documents.  Individual parts may be selected or combined for use in the classroom depending on classroom needs.  The entire unit is designed to teach students about the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill and its impact on the environment and larger society.  Students learn that seemingly isolated incidents—in both time and place—affect larger areas for years beyond the event.  The Exxon Valdez disaster affected all of the United States as victims came from every state, and continues to impact America today, as seen in the recent Supreme Court decision.            

Time Needed: 1-2 class period 

Objectives

During your session, students will:

  • Analyze the historical significance of events; and how historical events impact present circumstances;
  • Develop historical empathy by perceiving past events as they were experienced by people at the time;
  • Appreciate the role of the accidental in history;
  • Understand the relationship between geography and history, and its context for historic events;
  • Recognize the roles of popular culture, federal, state, and local governments; and how such roles and relationships demonstrate change and continuity over time; and
  • Appreciate and articulate the importance of the Rule of Law for protecting the environment

Materials Needed: 

Procedure

  • Introduction 
    • Use the Exxon Valdez Power Point presentation as an introduction to, or entire lesson on the disaster, the clean up, the impact on wildlife, and the long-term effects on Alaska residents.
  • Choose a few personal stories about the oil spill’s impact on local communities from the Hard Aground, Anchorage Daily News website to share with your students.  Have them read the stories and discuss them as a class.  
  • Ask students to create an “I Am” poem based on the personal stories that they read.  Ask them to put themselves in the positions of the people affected by the Exxon Valdez oil spill, or the recent Supreme Court decision.   
  • Ask students to create a “Found Poem,” using the personal stories that they read.  “Found Poetry” involves students selecting words right from a document, in this case the newspaper articles with personal stories, and creating a poem.  ONLY words from the document, or newspaper article, may be used.   
  • Have students read portions of the Exxon Shipping v. Baker Supreme Court briefs and stage a debate between the two parties, or perhaps even some third party amicus brief authors.  Incorporate some of the personal stories from earlier activities to add their perspectives to the debate.   
  • Ask students to create a Concept Web, individually, in small groups, or as a class, using the Exxon Shipping v. Baker case.  Put the 1989 oil spill in the middle of the web, and branch out by brainstorming possible effects, followed by more effects, followed by more effects, and so on, to illustrate the complexity of this particular incident and case.  Draw the web on notebook paper, chart paper, or the white board in front of the class, depending on your needs and preferences.  Concept Webs templates are available online at http://www.teach-nology.com/web_tools/graphic_org/concept_web/. 
  • Debrief
    • Ask students what they learned about the far-reaching and long-term effects of seemingly isolated environmental disasters, such as an oil spill
    • Talk with students about the role of laws and government at all levels in this particular situation, and ask what can be learned for other situations.  What might be learned from this case?  

Additional Resources

Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council

Established by the State of Alaska and the federal government in response to the Exxon Valdez disaster, the Trustee Council is responsible for overseeing injury assessments and payments.  The Council’s site offers an extensive history of the oil spill, photos, clean-up efforts, and up to date information on the state of Prince William Sound and its ecosystems.

Exxon Shipping Company v. Baker et al. No. 07-219, Legal Information Institute, Cornell 

The Legal Information Institute website is one-stop shopping for the case syllabus, formal opinions, and dissenting opinions of the Supreme Court justices.  Everything is available for free download.  

Exxon Shipping Company v. Baker et al. No. 07-219, Oyez U.S. Supreme Court Media Project

The Oyez Project is a collection of U.S. Supreme Court Media.  The case is outlined, similar to the style of the Legal Information Institute, but also summarized for easy consumption by readers.  The Oyez site also offers court transcripts, and recorded oral arguments for free download.  

National Curriculum Standards for Social Studies, National Council for the Social Studies

Theme 2: Time, Continuity, and Change

Theme 3: People, Places, and Environments

Theme 6: Power, Authority, and Governance

Theme 10: Civic Ideals and Practices