Meat Free Monday
Meat Free Monday
Meat Free Monday
Measuring
Meat Free Monday
Section 1: Beef Burgers and Baths Background
Animal agriculture results in vast amounts of
Activity 1: Discussion greenhouse gases being released into the
Start this section by discussing the ways water is used in meat production atmosphere. It requires increasingly
generally. A vast amount of water is needed to grow the grass, forage and unsustainable levels of precious resources
feed that cattle eat over their lifetimes and there is also the water needed including land, water and energy. It is a major
for drinking, cleaning and processing. Ask the students what they think contributor towards global environmental
this means in terms of the amount of water used in producing just one degradation and climate change. This series of
150g beef burger. Ask them to guess roughly how many bath tubs of lessons will prompt students to calculate for
water would be needed. After some discussion, say that the maths themselves the environmental impact of meat
unitary method will be used to get an answer to this question. production and present their findings using
measurements of comparison which are
easy for people to assimilate.
Activity 2: Introducing the Unitary Method
The unitary method is a way of adapting some given information
involving two or more variables (e.g. ‘5 oranges cost £1.50’) into a form
that is desired for some other purpose (e.g. ‘9 oranges cost ?’). It involves Introduction
scaling down one of the variables to a single unit (e.g. ‘1 orange costs ?’), This resource is divided into three sections. The
and then performing an operation to alter it to the desired value. Start with first section introduces the maths of the unitary
some simple examples, such as those below. Here, each scaling operation method and is about water usage. The second
is indicated in bold and an arrow points to the result of the operation. section relates to the cutting down of Amazon
Example 1
rainforest to make way for cattle pasture. And
the third section relates to the environmental
5 oranges cost £1.50. How much do 9 oranges cost? benefit of doing Meat Free Monday against
driving fewer miles in a car.
Answer:
5 oranges cost £1.50
÷5 –› 1 orange costs 30p
x9 –› 9 oranges cost £2.70 Learning Objectives
Example 2
Students should :
n learn the unitary method
4 tins of beans weigh 1.83 kg. If a shopper doesn’t want to carry more n develop confidence in using the unitary
than 10 kg, how many tins can they buy at one time? method to convert factual data from one
form to another
Answer: n gain practice in converting between
4 tins weigh 1.83 kg different units of measure
n appreciate the power of algebra to
embrace multiple scenarios
4
÷1.83 –› = 2.19 tins weigh 1 kg
1.83 n gain practice in using a spreadsheet
x10 –› 21.9 tins weigh 10 kg n consider how data can be presented in
different ways in order to raise awareness
So the shopper can buy at most 21 tins of an issue
of beans. n understand the positive impact of eating
less meat
Accompanying Materials
Measuring Meat Free Monday – Sources
Activity 3: Beef burger versus Bathing
Once your students are confident in using the unitary method, move on
to comparing the amount of water used in producing a beef burger to
that used in taking a bath or shower by talking through the following
calculations.
Teacher notes:
Start by condensing the given information into a short sentence
focussing mainly on the numbers:
Bring the class together and see what answers the students came up
with. They should have found:
–› ‘football pitches’ per hour The number of square metres cleared for cattle
each hour = 5,525,100,000
8760 = 630719
1 person going meat free for 52 days ≈ 1 car with 30 mpg reducing driving by 448 miles.
This sentence has 5 variables, rather than just two or three as in the
earlier examples, but the same principle of successively writing parallel
sentences applies. Other (British) data to be used are:
÷30 –› 1 person going meat free for 52 days ≈ 1 car (1 mpg) reducing driving by 448 miles
30
×45 –› 1 person going meat free for 52 days ≈ 1 car (45 mpg) reducing driving by 45 × 448 = 672 miles
30
Step 2 (Changing to ‘driving days’)
Car drives 7800 miles in 365 days
1 person going meat free for 52 days ≈ 1 car with 30 mpg reducing driving by 448 miles.
Then ask the students to work on their own (or in groups) through the
following two steps.
It may be helpful to talk with the class as a whole, consolidating the first
step before going on to the second.
÷30 –› 1 person going meat free for 52 days ≈ 1 car (1 mpg) reducing driving by 448 miles
30
× x –› 1 person going meat free for 52 days ≈ 1 car (x mpg) reducing driving by 448 x miles
30
Step 2 (Changing to ‘driving days’)
Car drives y miles in 365 days
As
448 × 365 = 16352 the conclusion is that skipping meat for one
30 3
day a week reduces the person’s annual carbon footprint by as much as
not driving their car for 16352x days.
3y
So now, rather than just using the average fuel consumption and average
annual mileage, students can work out the environmental benefit (in
terms of the number of days of the car being off the road) for any
combination of fuel consumptions and annual mileages.
Activity 4: Questions
The following questions could be given to the students to work on in
groups. Alternatively, you may wish to set them as homework.
They can now type in any values for the fuel consumption and annual
mileage in the squares B3 and D3 (respectively) and a figure will
automatically appear in the square F3. This figure will be the number of
days of taking the car off the road which (for the mpg and mileage values
in B3 and D3) has the same environmental benefit as doing Meat Free
Monday for a year.
Students can do the same thing for rows 4, 5 and so on and get a whole
range of different scenarios.
Every increase in the mpg in the B column gives an increase in the
non-driving days in the F column and every increase in the mileage in
the D column gives a decrease in the non-driving days in the F column.
So students can explore what combinations of mpg and mileage values
give various different values for the number of non-driving days.