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Contents
Before you begin...
Before you begin using the GUARDNA Teacher’s Guide, here are a few tips:
- This guide includes the explanations needed to use the GUARDNA materials.
- Words highlighted in blue are explained in the Glossary section at the end of this document.
- Words or sentences highlighted in blue and underlined include a link to an internet site.
- All the materials needed to carry out the activities related to the Activity Cards are available as handouts at the end of the document.
We would love to hear your opinion about the GUARDNA materials and the Teacher’s Guide: was the material useful? What did you learn? What would you improve? Do you miss something? Email your feedback to naima@nammco.org. We are waiting for your feedback!
Introduction to GUARDNA
This booklet serves the teacher to know how to use the GUARDNA educational materials in the classroom.
The GUARDNA materials consist of Activity Cards and Information Cards. Information Cards are included within ‘Activity Packages’ and are intended to complement the information provided in each activity. Additionally, Information cards such as Threat and Uses Cards can be used to promote discussions in the classroom as they offer suggestions for discussion. Species Cards feature a research topic that allows students to conduct their own research and present findings to the rest of the class.
About this guide
A thriving North Atlantic is crucial for the Nordic region, providing oxygen, food, resources, and climate stability. However, in the recent decades human activities and climate change have threatened our oceans. In this context, GUARDNA-Guardians of the North Atlantic aims to educate the Nordic youth (ages 7-20) about ocean conservation and contribute to their empowerment as blue allies to contribute to the sustainable use of the marine environment. For this purpose, GUARDNA uses marine mammals as iconic ambassadors of the ocean.
This project aims at creating educational materials, including information cards, hands-on activities, and opportunities for engagement in real-world research, focused on marine mammals, threats they face, the uses, and users’ roles and responsibilities. The goal is to engage students and raise awareness about the challenges that the broader marine ecosystem undergoes and understand the different realities, and therefore solutions, across the region.
Activity cards
The Information Cards are meant to be used in combination with a wide range of exercises and hands-on activities, both indoors and outdoors, suggested in the GUARDNA project. These activities are designed to be adaptable across various subjects within the school curriculum, such as natural sciences, mathematics, language lessons, and ethics.
Some of these activities are also meant to be performed outdoors. These activities aim to promote the exploration and conservation of local marine ecosystems, by actively engaging the students in their own coastal environments (e.g., learn about the local species and how they interact with one another) and by encouraging different initiatives to promote environmentally responsible practices right in their own communities, either coastal or inlands. These activities will promote experimental learning and interdisciplinary connections, making ocean conservation relevant in multiple educational contexts.
Activities related to MINTAG and NASS24 allow students to participate in real-world high-profile research, fostering a strong connection to the study of the ocean and increasing the engagement in STEAM education.
How to use activity cards
All the GUARDNA cards have been organised into ‘Activity Packages’ to supplement the activity’s information. Some details to better understand the activity cards:
- All instructions necessary to conduct the activities are provided within the cards. We recommend the teacher reads the cards before handing the activity out to the students.
- Handouts are available for printing to facilitate the completion of each activity.
- Some activities have examples of the solutions and tips for the teachers. These are marked as “Teacher only”
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These cards are designed for classroom use, delivering concise and accessible information about key aspects of ocean conservation and in particular, marine mammals. GUARDNA is centered around several sets of information cards related to marine mammal species, threats, stakeholders and uses. They serve as valuable references to enhance students’ understanding of marine ecosystems, threats and users’ needs and responsibilities.
Species Cards
- Regardless of the language of the cards, the cards also include the scientific name of each species as well as the common name of the species in the languages of the North Atlantic that will be covered by GUARDNA
- The IUCN status can be checked in the IUCN’s Red List.
- Geographical names (e.g., NA, NEA, Subarctic, Arctic) are shown in a map at the end of this document (see section Geographical terms) for clarification.
- The number of hunted/caught animals is given as the average for 2019 to 2023 for the entire country. However, it is worth noting the existence of several management areas within the same country. The yearly numbers per management area can be found in the Catch Database.
- At the end of the card, a research question is posed to the students. Using different species cards, teachers can encourage students to do the research and present the findings to the classmates.
Stakeholder cards
Stakeholder Cards describe the stakeholders using marine mammals in the North Atlantic.
Some details to better understand the cards:
- The ‘Mapping the stakeholders’ influence’ positions stakeholders within a power-interest matrix, enabling the categorisation of each stakeholder’s influence on decision-making regarding marine mammal management in the North Atlantic. Stakeholders are placed on the grid according to their current level of influence. Teachers are encouraged to engage students in discussions on potential improvements to the power-interest matrix (e.g., should consumers have more power?)
- The number in brackets indicates a reference. The full reference list can be found at the end of this document.
Uses cards
Since pre-historic times, stranded or hunted marine mammals have represented resources for many coastal communities worldwide, both in terms of food and materials but also as artistic and spiritual inspiration. The Uses Cards describe the multiple facets of the marine mammal resource.
Some details to better understand the cards:
- The number in brackets indicates a reference. The full reference list can be found at the end of this document.
- At the end of the card, a discussion topic is presented. Teachers can encourage students to discuss such points.
- The QR code at the end of the card leads to the NAMMCO website where more information on the topic can be found.
Threats cards
The sustainability of stocks/populations or species is a fragile balance between their abundance, their geographical distribution and movement, and the direct (e.g., hunting) and indirect (e.g., climate change) impacts of human activities. It is important to note that a threat to an individual does not necessarily translate to a threat to the entire population; for instance, while hunting may endanger individual animals, responsible and sustainable hunting practices do not pose a threat to the population as a whole.
The Threat Cards give an overview of the threats or challenges that marine mammals face in the North Atlantic and how easily can we mitigate them.
Some details to better understand the cards:
- The coloured bar on the side of the first page indicates the ease or difficulty of mitigating and quantifying each threat, with red indicating a high degree of difficulty and green representing a lower degree of difficulty.
- The number in brackets indicates a reference. The full reference list can be found at the end of this document.
- At the end of the card, a discussion topic is presented. Teachers can encourage students to discuss such points.
- The QR code at the end of the card leads to the NAMMCO website where more information on the topic can be found.
Geographical terms
In GUARDNA cards, numerous geographical terms are referenced. The map provided below serves as a guide, indicating these geographical terms as mentioned in the GUARDNA cards. It is important to note that the boundaries used here are not official and are only used for reference purposes.
Geographical definitions within GUARDNA:
- NAMMCO Area: This encompasses the marine Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) of the NAMMCO member countries.
- Arctic: The delineation of the Arctic region is based on the boundaries established by the Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna (CAFF).
- Subarctic: This boundary marks the region immediately south of the Arctic and north of the humid continental regions in the North Atlantic.
- North Atlantic (NA): Encompasses the area stretching from the equator to the Fram Strait, situated between north Svalbard and north Greenland
- North East Atlantic (NEA): Refers to the eastern portion of the North Atlantic.




















































































































