NEED Songbook Reinforce energy concepts and sing along to NEED’s favorite songs, including E-N-E-R-G-Y and What Ya Gonna Do With An Energy Waster?
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Grade Level:
Pri le Pri EInt
Ele
Primary IntPri Int
Sec Intermediate Ele
Elem
Elementary
Sec
Secondary
Sec Subject Areas: Science
Creative Arts
NEED Mission Statement
Teacher Advisory Board Shelly Baumann Rockford, MI
Barbara Lazar Albuquerque, NM
Constance Beatty Kankakee, IL
Robert Lazar Albuquerque, NM
Amy Constant Raleigh, NC
Leslie Lively Porters Falls, WV
Nina Corley Galveston, TX
Jennifer Winterbottom Pottstown, PA
Regina Donour Whitesburg, KY
Mollie Mukhamedov Port St. Lucie, FL
Linda Fonner New Martinsville, WV
Don Pruett Jr. Sumner, WA
Samantha Forbes Vienna, VA
Josh Rubin Palo Alto, CA
Robert Griegoliet Naperville, IL
Joanne Spaziano Cranston, RI
Michelle Garlick
Gina Spencer Virginia Beach, VA
Viola Henry Thaxton, VA
Tom Spencer Chesapeake, VA
Bob Hodash
Jennifer Trochez MacLean Los Angeles, CA
DaNel Hogan Tucson, AZ Greg Holman Paradise, CA Linda Hutton Kitty Hawk, NC Matthew Inman Spokane, WA
The mission of The NEED Project is to promote an energy conscious and educated society by creating effective networks of students, educators, business, government and community leaders to design and deliver objective, multisided energy education programs.
Teacher Advisory Board Statement In support of NEED, the national Teacher Advisory Board (TAB) is dedicated to developing and promoting standardsbased energy curriculum and training.
Permission to Copy NEED materials may be reproduced for non-commercial educational purposes.
Energy Data Used in NEED Materials NEED believes in providing the most recently reported energy data available to our teachers and students. Most statistics and data are derived from the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s Annual Energy Review that is published yearly. Working in partnership with EIA, NEED includes easy to understand data in our curriculum materials. To do further research, visit the EIA web site at www.eia.gov. EIA’s Energy Kids site has great lessons and activities for students at www. eia.gov/kids.
Joanne Trombley West Chester, PA Jen Varrella Fort Collins, CO Carolyn Wuest Pensacola, FL Wayne Yonkelowitz Fayetteville, WV
1.800.875.5029 www.NEED.org © 2014
Printed on Recycled Paper
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NEED Songbook
NEED Songbook Table of Contents These energy songs were originally developed by Rich Ammentorp, Ramona Curtis, and J. Keith Anderson as part of Schaumburg (IL) Elementary School District 54’s energy education program. The songs were edited by Anne Allen of the Tennessee Energy Education Network and The NEED Project staff and were musically transcribed by Robert Cobb.
Standards Correlation Information
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NEED Students Are High-Minded
5
Savin’ Energy All Day Long
6
Savin’ Energy, Just Savin’ Energy
7
E-N-E-R-G-Y: That’s The Way We Spell Energy
8
What Ya Gonna Do With An Energy Waster?
9
Renewable Energy Song
10
Leaders For Tomorrow
11
Oh Dear! What Can The Matter Be?
12
Evaluation Form
15
e ©2014 The NEED Project
P.O. Box 10101, Manassas, VA 20108
1.800.875.5029
www.NEED.org
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Standards Correlation Information www.NEED.org/curriculumcorrelations
Next Generation Science Standards This guide effectively supports many Next Generation Science Standards. This material can satisfy performance expectations, science and engineering practices, disciplinary core ideas, and cross cutting concepts within your required curriculum. For more details on these correlations, please visit NEED’s curriculum correlations web site.
Common Core State Standards This guide has been correlated to the Common Core State Standards in both language arts and mathematics. These correlations are broken down by grade level and guide title, and can be downloaded as a spreadsheet from the NEED curriculum correlations web site.
Individual State Science Standards This guide has been correlated to each state’s individual science standards. These correlations are broken down by grade level and guide title, and can be downloaded as a spreadsheet from the NEED web site.
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NEED Songbook
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NEED Students Are High-Minded
NEED stu - dents are
All
save
en - er - gy
high - mind - ed;
and
don’t
bless
mind
my
soul,
it
all
they’re
day
dou -
ble joint - ed; they
long
Repeat the verse seven times. On the second verse, hum the first measure and sing the rest. On the third verse, hum the first two measures and sing the rest. With each verse, hum another measure and sing the rest until the complete song is hummed. Increase the tempo as you sing each verse.
©2014 The NEED Project
P.O. Box 10101, Manassas, VA 20108
1.800.875.5029
www.NEED.org
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6
Savin’ Energy All Day Long
NEED Songbook
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Savin’ Energy, Just Savin’ Energy Tune: Singing in the Rain
N.C.
ALL:
I’m
sav - - - - - - -
in’ en - er - - - gy.
Just
sav - - - - - - in’ en - er - - - - gy!
What a
N.C.
glo - - - - - - - - ri -ous
feel - - - - - ing. I’m
hap - hap - hap - py
a - gain.
LEADER:
1. Thumbs
D.C. 2-10
1.
up!
D.S.
KIDS: (echo) ALL:
up!
Thumbs
up!
Thumbs up! I’m
back!
El-bows
back!
El - bows
eyes!
2. Elbows
back!
El-bows
back!
I’m
3. Butt
out!
Butt
out!
I’m
II.
up!
Thumbs up!
10. Cross your eyes!
11. Sit
down!
Add a new command with each verse: 1. Thumbs up! 7. Head up! 2. Elbows back! 8. Tongue out! 3. Butt out! 9. Turn around! 4. Chest out! 10. Cross your eyes! 5. Knees together! 11. Sit down! 6. Toes together! ©2014 The NEED Project
P.O. Box 10101, Manassas, VA 20108
1.800.875.5029
www.NEED.org
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E-N-E-R-G-Y: That’s The Way We Spell Energy
CHORUS E
is the
E
fol - - - - lows
G
E
N
E
as
third.
is
fill - - - in’ in.
R
G
Pet ––– ro –– le – um,
Y
coal, and
Hey hey, what-cha say?
8
way we be - - gin.
gas–––––
N
R
is
the
is the
fourth let - ter
Y
is
That’s the way
to
in
at
spell
We must find a
Hey hey, what-cha say?
sec - ond let ––ter in.
Let’s find
way
a
this
the
word.
end.
Oh,
en ––– er ––– gy.
to
way
make them last.
to ––––- day!
NEED Songbook
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What Ya Gonna Do With An Energy Waster?
SING BEFORE EACH VERSE What ya gon-na do with an
en–er – gy wast –– er?
What ya gon-na do with an en–er – gy wast – er?
What ya gon-na do with an en–er – gy wast –– er
ear ––––– ly
in
the
morn ––– ing?
VERSE
1. Turn
Turn
the
the
therm-o-stat
down
to
six ––– ty.
therm-o-stat
down
to
for –––– ty
Turn
the
ear ––––– ly
therm-o-stat
in
the
down
to
fif ––––– ty.
morn –––––––– ing.
SING AFTER EACH VERSE Way Hey Let’s all save en– er–gy. Way Hey Let’s all save en– er–gy.
1. Turn the thermostat down to sixty, fifty, forty..... 2. Throw them in the shower with no hot water..... 3. Turn off the lights and give them candles..... 4. Take away the car and make them walk home..... ©2014 The NEED Project
P.O. Box 10101, Manassas, VA 20108
1.800.875.5029
Way Hey Let’s all save en– er–gy
ear–ly in the morn–ing!
5. Take away their music, games, and TVs..... 6. Make up your own....... Last: They’ll no longer waste our energy......
www.NEED.org
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Renewable Energy Song Tune: The Never-Ending Song
We can use
en ––- er –– gy that
–––– new ––––– a ––––––––– ble,
–––– ther - mal, so – lar,
last
10
and
my
nev ––––– er
friends.
wind, and bi –– o –– mass.
last
ends.
and
It’s called re -
Hy –– dro and
These
are
last.
fu ––els
We
for the
ge –––––– o –
fu – ture
can
that will
use
NEED Songbook
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Leaders For Tomorrow I.
Tune: I Love the Mountains
II.
We are NEED stu–dents; we
learn a –– bout en – er – gy.
Lead –– ers for
to –– mor –– row,
we
III. help shape Earth’s des –– tin –– y.
Con –– serv –– ing,
pre –– serv – ing,
act –– ing
re –– spon –– si –– bly.
IV.
D.C. Boom –– de –-– ya –––-– da, Boom –-– de ––– ya –––– da,
Boom - de – ya –– da, Boom – de –– ya –– da.
CODA Boom
Boom
Boom
Boom
Boom
Yeah!
Divide students into four groups. Sing the song once in unison, then sing the song in rounds as shown by the Roman numerals. After each group finishes the third round, have them continue singing the fourth stanza (Boom-de-ya-da). When all groups are singing Boom-de-ya-da, finish with the coda.
©2014 The NEED Project
P.O. Box 10101, Manassas, VA 20108
1.800.875.5029
www.NEED.org
11
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Oh Dear! What Can The Matter Be?
CHORUS
Oh
dear!
caught wast –– ing
What can the
en ––– er ––– gy. They
mat - ter be?
lost all their
Six
young
pow––––er from
kids
Mon–day to
got
Fri – day and
FINE VERSE now they know
kid had
a
care!
waste – ful trad –– i – tion
kid was a
real waste-ful
– i –– tion. wat – er.
why they should
of
daught-er who
Oh
my!
1. The
first ––––––––––– young
2. The
sec ––––––––––––––ond
leav - ing
his
switch in
an
washed
the
dish – es
while
His
light
bulb
burned
out
And
lat – er
that
night wished her
while he bath
was
tub was
up –––––– ward pos– run ––––– ning
the
fish –– in’ And
now
he knows
hot – ter And
now
she knows
D.C. al Fine
12
why
he
should
care!
Oh
my!
why
she
should
care!
Oh
my!
NEED Songbook
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Oh Dear! What Can The Matter Be?
VERSES 1.
The first young kid had a wasteful tradition Of leaving his switch in an upward position. His light burned out while he was fishin’. And now he knows why he should care!
2.
The second kid was a real wasteful daughter Who washed the dishes while running the water. And later that night wished her bath tub was hotter And now she knows why she should care!
3.
The third young kid liked to walk with bare feet— Instead of warm socks, he turned up the heat. The bill was so high, he had nothing to eat And now he knows why he should care!
4.
The fourth young kid was late as a rule— Quite often would miss the last bus for school. Her mom had to drive her and ran out of fuel And now she knows why she should care!
5.
The fifth young kid wanted some kind of snack— He opened the fridge—looked in front and in back. He stood there so long, the food all turned black And now he knows why he should care!
6.
The sixth young kid often ran out to play Leaving her Play Station running all day. Her dad finally took the whole system away And now she knows why she should care!
©2014 The NEED Project
P.O. Box 10101, Manassas, VA 20108
1.800.875.5029
www.NEED.org
13
Youth Awards for Energy Achievement
All NEED schools have outstanding classroom-based programs in which students learn about energy. Does your school have student leaders who extend these activities into their communities? To recognize outstanding achievement and reward student leadership, The NEED Project conducts the National Youth Awards Program for Energy Achievement. This program combines academic competition with recognition to acknowledge everyone involved in NEED during the year—and to recognize those who achieve excellence in energy education in their schools and communities.
What’s involved? Students and teachers set goals and objectives, and keep a record of their activities. If students like, they can combine their planning materials and activities into a binder or portfolio that highlights their goals, outreach opportunities, and their evaluation of the activities. Students will then use this binder or portfolio to help them create a digital project to submit for judging. In April, digital projects should be uploaded to the online submission site. Want more info? Check out www.NEED.org/Youth-Awards for more application and program information, previous winners, and photos of past events.
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NEED Songbook
NEED Songbook Evaluation Form State: ___________
Grade Level: ___________
Number of Students: __________
1. Did you use the entire guide?
Yes
No
2. Were the instructions clear and easy to follow?
Yes
No
3. Did the guide meet your academic objectives?
Yes
No
4. Was the guide age appropriate?
Yes
No
5. Was the allotted time sufficient to conduct the guide?
Yes
No
6. Was the guide easy to use?
Yes
No
7. Was the preparation required acceptable for the guide?
Yes
No
8. Were the students interested and motivated?
Yes
No
9. Was the energy knowledge content age appropriate?
Yes
No
10. Would you use this guide again? Please explain any ‘no’ statement below.
Yes
No
How would you rate the guide overall?
excellent
good
fair
poor
How would your students rate the guide overall?
excellent
good
fair
poor
What would make this guide more useful to you?
Other Comments:
Please fax or mail to: The NEED Project
©2014 The NEED Project
P.O. Box 10101 Manassas, VA 20108 FAX: 1-800-847-1820
P.O. Box 10101, Manassas, VA 20108
1.800.875.5029
www.NEED.org
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National Sponsors and Partners American Electric Power American Wind Energy Association Arizona Public Service Arizona Science Center Arkansas Energy Office Armstrong Energy Corporation Association of Desk & Derrick Clubs Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania Barnstable County, Massachusetts Robert L. Bayless, Producer, LLC BP Blue Grass Energy Boulder Valley School District Brady Trane Cape Light Compact–Massachusetts L.J. and Wilma Carr Chevron Chevron Energy Solutions Columbia Gas of Massachusetts ComEd ConEdison Solutions ConocoPhillips Constellation Daniel Math and Science Center David Petroleum Corporation Denver Public Schools Desk and Derrick of Roswell, NM Dominion DonorsChoose Duke Energy East Kentucky Power Eastern Kentucky University Elba Liquifaction Company El Paso Corporation E.M.G. Oil Properties Encana Encana Cares Foundation Energy Education for Michigan Energy Training Solutions First Roswell Company FJ Management. Inc. Foundation for Environmental Education FPL The Franklin Institute Frontier Associates Government of Thailand–Energy Ministry Green Power EMC Guam Energy Office Guilford County Schools – North Carolina Gulf Power Gerald Harrington, Geologist Harvard Petroleum Hawaii Energy Houston Museum of Natural Science ©2014 The NEED Project
Idaho National Laboratory Illinois Clean Energy Community Foundation Independent Petroleum Association of America Independent Petroleum Association of New Mexico Indiana Michigan Power – An AEP Company Interstate Renewable Energy Council Kentucky Clean Fuels Coalition Kentucky Department of Education Kentucky Department of Energy Development and Independence Kentucky Power – An AEP Company Kentucky River Properties LLC Kentucky Utilities Company Kinder Morgan Leidos Linn County Rural Electric Cooperative Llano Land and Exploration Louisiana State University Cooperative Extension Louisville Gas and Electric Company Maine Energy Education Project Maine Public Service Company Marianas Islands Energy Office Massachusetts Division of Energy Resources Michigan Oil and Gas Producers Education Foundation Miller Energy Mississippi Development Authority–Energy Division Mojave Environmental Education Consortium Mojave Unified School District Montana Energy Education Council NASA National Association of State Energy Officials National Fuel National Grid National Hydropower Association National Ocean Industries Association National Renewable Energy Laboratory Nebraska Public Power District New Mexico Oil Corporation New Mexico Landman’s Association NRG Energy, Inc. NSTAR OCI Enterprises Offshore Energy Center Offshore Technology Conference Ohio Energy Project Oxnard School District Pacific Gas and Electric Company Paxton Resources
P.O. Box 10101, Manassas, VA 20108
1.800.875.5029
www.NEED.org
PECO Pecos Valley Energy Committee Petroleum Equipment Suppliers Association Phillips 66 PNM Read & Stevens, Inc. Rhode Island Office of Energy Resources River Parishes Community College RiverQuest Robert Armstrong Roswell Geological Society Sandia National Laboratory Saudi Aramco Science Museum of Virginia C.T. Seaver Trust Shell Shell Chemicals Society of Petroleum Engineers Society of Petroleum Engineers – Middle East, North Africa and South Asia David Sorenson Southern Company Southern LNG Space Sciences University–Laboratory of the University of California Berkeley Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development–Energy Division Tioga Energy Toyota Tri-State Generation and Transmission TXU Energy United States Energy Association United Way of Greater Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey University of Nevada–Las Vegas, NV University of Tennessee University of Texas - Austin University of Texas - Tyler U.S. Department of Energy U.S. Department of Energy–Hydrogen Program U.S. Department of Energy–Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy U.S. Department of Energy–Office of Fossil Energy U.S. Department of Energy–Wind for Schools U.S. Department of the Interior–Bureau of Land Management U.S. Energy Information Administration West Bay Exploration Western Massachusetts Electric Company W. Plack Carr Company Yates Petroleum Corporation