Driving Question
How is clean and accessible drinking water in Philadelphia a civic responsibility?
Big Ideas
In most places in the world today, even water from a relatively clean natural source probably needs to be cleaned and tested before it can be consumed.
In Philadelphia, drinking water treatment is a multi-step process that in many cases mimics nature but also is tested every step of the way to comply with federal regulations and ensure public health.
Summary
Making safe and reliable tap water requires a multi-step treatment process. Modeling one of the very important steps to clean water in class will help students see the evidence for themselves.
Engage
Start the class by holding up in front of your students two two clear glasses, one filled with tap water and one with rain water.
Ask them: Can I drink this water? How do you know you can trust it to be safe to drink?
Follow this with the slide deck questions to define the differences POTABLE, GRAY and POLLUTED and discuss the distinctions.
POTABLE (Safe for human consumption)
GRAY (rain water for watering plants, washing sidewalks/cars/animals etc)
POLLUTED (not good for anybody or anything!)
Ask student to write a reflection.
Explore and Explain
You will be guiding the students through the building of a model of a water filtration system.
The unit slide deck includes the instructions for building the filtration system.
The slide deck linked HERE is a copy of just the filtration system instructions that can be used with your students. It also contains some introductory questions.
Materials needed for each group of 2, 3, or 4 students:
- Plastic 2 Liter bottle (soda or water). Cut off the top third. The top will be inverted to become the funnel. Recommended – Do this prior to handing out materials to the students.
- Use a piece of duct tape or masking tape around the edge of each section to soften the edges
- Materials for filtering: Sand, Pea Gravel, Other materials they may think of to use (cotton balls? Paper towel? )
- Coffee Filter
- A second container to move the water into to be able to filter it multiple times.
You will also need ‘dirty water.’ You can create dirty water by mixing a pitcher of water with soil, coffee grounds, leaves, plant material, small paper trash, etc.
Students will layer other filtering material into the coffee filter.
Students may test if the order matters. Think about how the large items in the water may be filtered out by the larger filter material (gravel). Layering the sand in first, then the gravel might be the most effective way to filter the water more efficiently. You can have the students test to see if the order the water moves through the filter matters.
Students will filter the water multiple times.
Option 1: Provide students with the materials and they design the solution
Option 2: Guide students through the creation and testing of the filter.
Have students DRAW their filter design and label the order the filter materials were added.
Have them WRITE an explanation of why they put the materials where they did or if they added or removed anything.
Have them then create a PROTOTYPE of their filter using the materials and test to see if it works.
Have students write a description of their observations of the results of their first filtering trial. What does the water look like? Did it filter all the ‘dirty’ elements in the water?
Have the students move the water into the second container and do a second trial. Have students document their observations for this second trial.
Have students conduct a third trial.
If they make any revisions to their design, have them document why and what was the reason for their design revisions.
Elaborate
In this next part of the Learning Experience, students will learn the steps in the Philadelphia Drinking Water Treatment System by watching a video, and seeing if they can put the steps in order.
Use this Google Draw Document Water Treatment Poster Blank. Make a Copy. Download THIS FOLDER of images that students can drag/drop on to the blank process timeline.
The correct, full version may be found HERE.
The card images have the order in the title to help the students determine the order. You can alter the image names to remove the numbers if desired.
If you want to share a striking example of how polluted our waterways were as a consequence of the industry and manufacturing before federal regulation, share this newspaper story about Frankford Creek (this is only one article of many about how polluted the rivers were in the early to mid 20th century ) These pictures and letters from Philly H20: A Sad History of Frankford Creek depict the issue from 1938. Also here as a one-page format: Attachment 2.4-D.
In modern times, the headwaters of the Schuylkill River are discolored by abandoned coal mine drainage
Extensions
COMPARE TO OTHER REGIONS NEAR PHILADELPHIA
Compare the Philadelphia Water Department Drinking Water Treatment process to other treatment processes. Consider differences in the way they treat the water, influences of geography, population, water supply, industry. See Attachment 2.4-F for descriptions of the drinking water treatment process in Wilmington, Reading and Delaware as an example.
Teacher Support
Driving Question:
How is clean and accessible drinking water in Philadelphia a civic responsibility?
Guiding Questions:
What does it take for us to drink a glass of fresh, clean, delicious water?
Engage:
How do we know water is safe to drink?
Explore and Explain:
Can we convert our polluted water to gray water through filtration?
How can we model water filtration the way nature does it?
Is filtration enough to make water potable?
Elaborate:
What other steps are needed to make water potable?
What does each step do in the process?
Extension:
What are the components of water before it is treated that might be of concern to PWD and the public?
What are the key factors that influence the designs of the drinking water treatment processes in Philadelphia and Las Vegas?
Students will be able to:
Engage:
Differentiate between potable, gray, waste water and polluted water by recording reflections, ideas, and surprises in their Watershed Journal.
Explore and Explain:
Build a model of a water filtration system in order to “make the polluted water sample useable as gray water.”
Elaborate:
Describe the basic steps of our local drinking water treatment process (from gray water to potable water).
Argue to defend the importance of every step of the drinking water treatment process.
Describe the key factors that influence the designs of the drinking water treatment processes in Philadelphia and another city of their choice.
Explore and Explain
For groups of 3-4 students will need
Activity Worksheet (it has set up directions too)
“Dirty” water sample (prepared by the teacher ahead of time).
Mix soil, oil, food coloring, leaves and water in a large beaker. Note: If food coloring is used, students will not be able to filter out the food coloring which will lead to a connection to the issues surrounding dye factories and to connections explaining why filtering alone is not sufficient.
Filtration System Materials:
- Plastic 2 Liter bottle (soda or water) already cut into two sections
- Duct Tape or Masking tape.
- Filtering material: Sand, Pea Gravel, Other materials?
- Coffee Filter
Elaborate
Drinking Water Treatment Process (VIMEO)
Google Draw Document Water Treatment Poster Blank. Make a Copy. Download THIS FOLDER of images that students can drag/drop on to the blank process timeline.
The correct, full version may be found HERE.
Newspaper clippings about Frankford Creek (Purple and Perfumed)
or as a link to HistoryPHLFrankford Creek Purple and Perfumed
Extension
Articles about different municipalities (Attachment 2.4-F)
BASIC WORDS:
Coagulation noun
The process of changing from a liquid to a semi-solid state. (Chemicals are added to the water to bind smaller particles together to encourage them to settle).
Disinfection noun
The process of introducing a chemical or other product added to kill disease causing organisms.
Filtration noun
The act of capturing impurities from the water as it passes through a layer of sand, gravel and charcoal now called rapid sand filtration. Philadelphia first introduced a slow sand filtration process in the early 1900s using sand and gravel only.
Filtered water noun
Water that has undergone a process to make it cleaner and safe to drink
Flocculation noun
The formation of small clumps. (In this process, water is gently mixed to make sure that the chemicals added in coagulation have bonded and that particles combine to form “floc” which will settle).
Raw Water noun
The natural water found in the environment, such as rainwater, ground water, and water from bodies like lakes and rivers.
Sedimentation noun
The process of matter settling to the bottom of a liquid by gravity.
Source Water noun
The water from streams, lakes or underground aquifers that is used for drinking.
Tap Water noun
Water that is supplied to a tap. Its uses include drinking, washing, cooking, and the flushing of toilets.
Unfiltered Water noun
raw water
Wastewater noun
Water that comes from flushed toilets, sewers and manufacturing plants that needs to be treated before it enters our waterways
Students will differentiate between potable water, gray water, waste water and polluted water by recording reflections, ideas, and surprises in their Watershed Journal.
Students will build a model of a water filtration system in order to “make the water sample useable as gray water.”
In their Watershed Journal,/foldables, students can write a journal entry that describes all 8 steps to the local drinking water filtration process works. Include illustrations.
Each student will individually write an argument for NOT eliminating the step they studied.
PA STEELS
Environmental Literacy and Sustainability
3.4.6-8.G Sustainability and Stewardship: Obtain and communicate information to describe how best resource management practices and environmental laws are designed to achieve environmental sustainability.
Related Standards
EfS C.27 The Dynamics of Systems and Change – Track existing causal relationships (feedback loops) within the system over time.
ELA W.6 Write arguments to support claims with clear reasons and relevant evidence.
Student Materials
Student Worksheet