SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1.2 Systems and models
Monday, October 26, 2015
Scott Lucas
Dwight School London, 2015
Assessment statements
Significant ideas
• A systems approach can help in the study of
complex environmental issues.
• The use of systems and models simplifies
interactions but may provide a more holistic view
without reducing issues to single processes.
Knowledge and understanding
• A systems approach is a way of visualizing a complex set of interactions
which may be ecological or societal.
• These interactions produce the emergent properties of the system.
• The concept of a system can be applied at a range of scales [Biosphere
refers to the part of the Earth inhabited by organisms that
extends from the upper parts of the atmosphere to deep within the
Earth’s crust.]
• A system is comprised of storages and flows.
• The flows provide inputs and outputs of energy and matter.
• The flows are processes that may be either transfers (a change in
location) or
transformations (a change in the chemical nature, a change in state or a
change in
energy).
Knowledge and understanding
• In system diagrams, storages are usually represented as rectangular boxes and
flows as arrows, with the direction of each arrow indicating the direction of
each flow. The size of the boxes and the arrows may be representative of the
size/magnitude of the storage or flow.
• An open system exchanges both energy and matter across its boundary while a
closed system exchanges only energy across its boundary.
• An isolated system is a hypothetical concept in which neither energy nor matter
is exchanged across the boundary.
• Ecosystems are open systems; closed systems only exist experimentally,
although the global geochemical cycles approximate to closed systems.
• A model is a simplified version of reality and can be used to understand how a
system works and to predict how it will respond to change.
• A model inevitably involves some approximation and therefore loss of accuracy.
Applications and skills
• Construct a system diagram or a model from a given set
of information. [Students should interpret given system
diagrams and use data to produce
their own for a variety of examples, such as carbon
cycling, food production and soil systems.] [Students
are not expected to know any particular system
diagram symbols such as those of Odum or Sankey.]
• Evaluate the use of models as a tool in a given
situation, for example, climate
change predictions.
International-mindedness
• The use of models facilitates international
collaboration in science by removing language
barriers that may exist.
Vocabulary
• System:
• Model:
• Storages:
• Flows:
• Inputs:
• Outputs:
• Energy:
• Matter:
• Transfers:
• Transformations:
Significant idea (SI1.2.1): A systems approach can help in the
study of complex environment issues
U1.2.1 A systems approach is a way of visualizing a complex set
of interactions which may be ecological or societal
• The environment is a set of systems that interact
• Scientists develop models to show the interactions
between each component in a system
• By nature, models involve simplification of the
system
• A 1:1 model would be as complex as the system itself; a
bit like having a 1:1 city map, the map would be as large
as the city itself
• Other systems interact with the environment
• Economic, societal, political, etc.
Significant idea (SI1.2.1): A systems approach can help in the
study of complex environment issues
U1.2.1 A systems approach is a way of visualizing a complex set
of interactions which may be ecological or societal
• Abstract or tangible systems are represented using
diagrams
• Systems interact and exchange inputs and outputs
of matter and energy (living systems); or
information (non-living systems)
U1.2.2 These interactions produce the
emergent properties of the system
• A systems is more than the sum of its parts
• A computer is more than a bunch of metals and
plastic
U1.2.3 The concept of a system
can be applied to a range of scales
• A system can be
• Living or non-living
• On a range of scales, examples include
• A cell, you, a bike, a car, your home, a pond, an ocean, a smart
phone, a farm, Earth, etc
• Open, closed or isolated; though most are open
including living systems
• Ecosystems are on a range of scales
• A drop of pond water, an ocean; a tree, a forest; a coral reff to
an island; a biome or the biosphere
U1.2.4 A system comprises of storages and flows
U1.2.5 The flows provide inputs and outputs of
energy and matter
• Storages are where energy or matter remains as
stock or storages
• Flows are where energy or matter move between
storages (inputs and outputs)
1.2 Systems and models
U1.2.6 The flows are processes and may be either transfers (a
change in location) or transformations (a change in chemical
nature, a change in state or a change in energy)
• Matter and energy flow (move) through ecosystems
as
• Transfers (change in location)
• Water from river to ocean
• Chemical energy of animal being eaten by another animal
• Ocean currents carrying heat
• Transformations (change in state)
• Matter to matter: glucose to starch, solid to liquid to gas
• Energy to energy: light to heat by radiating surfaces
• Energy to matter; light energy to chemical energy
(photosynthesis)
• Matter to energy: combustion
U1.2.7 In system diagrams, storages are usually represented as rectangular
boxes, and flows as arrows with the arrow indicating the direction of the
flow. The size of the box and the arrow may represent the size/magnitude
of the storage or flow.
Energy and matter exchange
in an immature forest
1.2 Systems and models
Task: Construct a model of your
home with storages and flows
Types of systems
• Three types: Open, Closed and Isolated
1. Open: exchanges energy and matter with its
surroundings
2. Closed: exchanges energy but cycles matter
3. Isolated: exchanges neither energy nor matter
U1.2.8 An open system exchanges both energy and matter across its
boundary while a closed system only exchanges energy across its boundary
U1.2.10 Ecosystems are open systems. Closed systems only exist
experimentally although the global geochemical cycles approximate to
closed systems
• Open: exchanges energy and matter with its
surroundings
• For example: a forest ecosystem
• Plants fix light via photosynthesis
• Air nitrogen is fixed by soil bacteria
• Herbivores may graze in other ecosystems i.e bordering
grassland
• Forest fires expose soil to erosion
• Minerals are leached by rain and water
• Water is lost is evaporation and transpiration
• Heat is exchanged with surrounding environment
U1.2.8 An open system exchanges both energy and matter across its
boundary while a closed system only exchanges energy across its boundary
U1.2.10 Ecosystems are open systems. Closed systems only exist
experimentally although the global geochemical cycles approximate to
closed systems
• Closed: exchanges energy but cycles matter
• Extremely rare in nature
• Hydrological, carbon and nitrogen cycles
• Earth is an “almost” closed system
• Energy: Light energy enters and heat energy is radiated
• Matter: very small amount of exchange; meteors and satellites
• Artificial closed systems include experiments and sealed
aquariums/terrariums eg. Bottle Garden
• Don’t typically survive long as they become unbalanced eg.
Biosphere 2
• Life in Biosphere 2 (TED Talk)
U1.2.9 An isolated system is a hypothetical
concept in which neither energy not matter is
exchanged across the boundary
• Isolated: exchanges neither energy nor matter
• Do not exist naturally, hypothetically the universe is
an isolated system
Summary
System Energy exchanged? Matter exchanged?
Open
Closed
Isolated
System Energy exchanged? Matter exchanged?
Open Yes Yes
Closed Yes No
Isolated No No
SI1.2.2: The use of models of systems simplifies interactions but may provide a
more holistic view than reducing issues to single processes
U1.2.11 A model is a simplified version of reality and can be used to understand
how a system works and predict how it will respond to change
U1.2.12 A model inevitably involves some approximation and loss of accuracy
• Scientists use models to understand a system and
predict the result of changes in the system
• Models have limitations as they, by nature, are
simplified so they don’t account for all interactions
• Hard to make models accurate as all the
interactions/rules may not be known/understood, or
omitted for simplicity
• A model can be:
• physical, a wind tunnel, solar system model,
aquarium/terrarium
• software, model of climate change or evolution
• Mathematical equations
• Data flow diagrams
SI1.2.2: The use of models of systems simplifies interactions but may provide a
more holistic view than reducing issues to single processes
U1.2.11 A model is a simplified version of reality and can be used to understand
how a system works and predict how it will respond to change
U1.2.12 A model inevitably involves some approximation and loss of accuracy
• Strengths
• Easier to work with than complex reality
• Can be used to predict the effect of change of input
• Can be applied to other similar situations
• Help us see patterns
• Can be used to visualize really small things (atoms) and really
large things (solar system)
• Weaknesses
• Accuracy is lost due to simplification
• If assumptions are wrong, the model is wrong
• Predictions may be inaccurate
• “Models are only as good as the rules used to create it” (BBC
Bitesize)
Gaia model (pg 25)
• In 1979, James Lovelock published a theory about
the Earth as an organism, one large system
composed of smaller systems and components
• Feedbacks, predominantly negative (see 1.3),
regulate things such as
• The temperature of Earth’s surface
• The composition of the atmosphere
• The ocean’s salinity
S1.2.1 Construct a system diagram or
a model from a given set of
information
S1.2.2 Evaluate the use of models as a
tool in a given situation, eg for climate
change predictions
1.2 Systems and models
1.2 Systems and models
1.2 Systems and models
Task: complete the systems
Burning
candle
Boiling kettle A plant Animal
population
Inputs
Outputs
Transfers
Transformations
1.2 Systems and models
Visit ProjectEd for more resources
https://sites.google.com/a/dwightlondon.org/projected/
Works Cited
• International Baccalaureate Organization. Diploma
Programme Environmental systems and societies
guide. The Hague: IB Publishing Ltd, Feb. 2015. PDF.
• "Modelling with Spreadsheets." BBC News. BBC,
n.d. Web. 13 Aug. 2015.
<http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/ict/m
odelling/0spreadsheetsrev5.shtml>.
• Rutherford, Jill. Environmental Systems and
Societies. Oxford: OUP, 2015. Print.

More Related Content

PPTX
Summary of topic 4.1
PPTX
Summary of topic 2.4
PDF
Topic 1.1 Perspectives Part 1.pdf
PPTX
1.1 Environmental value systems
PPTX
Topic 3.4 conservation of biodiversity
PPTX
Topic 2 -The Ecosystem Powerpoint
PPTX
Topic 3.1
PPTX
Ess topic 1 foundations of environmental systems and societies(first exam 2017)
Summary of topic 4.1
Summary of topic 2.4
Topic 1.1 Perspectives Part 1.pdf
1.1 Environmental value systems
Topic 3.4 conservation of biodiversity
Topic 2 -The Ecosystem Powerpoint
Topic 3.1
Ess topic 1 foundations of environmental systems and societies(first exam 2017)

What's hot (20)

PPTX
1.3 Energy and equilibria
PPTX
Summary of topic 5.1
PDF
Topic 1 systems and models
PPTX
Summary of topic 4.3
PPTX
Summary of topic 8.3
PPTX
Summary of topic 2.3
PPTX
2.2. Communities and ecosystems
PPTX
Summary of topic 4.4
PPTX
Topic 3.3
PPTX
Summary of topic 2.5
PPTX
Topic 3.2
PPTX
Summary of topic 7.3
PPTX
Summary of topic 5.2
PPTX
Summary of topic 6.1
PPTX
Summary of topic 4.2
PPTX
1.4 Sustainability
PPTX
Summary of topic 1.3
PDF
Topic 1.1 environmental value systems
PDF
Ess Topic 1 - Systems and Models
PPTX
Summary of topic 7.2
1.3 Energy and equilibria
Summary of topic 5.1
Topic 1 systems and models
Summary of topic 4.3
Summary of topic 8.3
Summary of topic 2.3
2.2. Communities and ecosystems
Summary of topic 4.4
Topic 3.3
Summary of topic 2.5
Topic 3.2
Summary of topic 7.3
Summary of topic 5.2
Summary of topic 6.1
Summary of topic 4.2
1.4 Sustainability
Summary of topic 1.3
Topic 1.1 environmental value systems
Ess Topic 1 - Systems and Models
Summary of topic 7.2
Ad

Similar to 1.2 Systems and models (20)

PPTX
1.2 Systems and models ESS Resource.pptx
PDF
topic 1 specifically 1.2 ess: systems and models
PPTX
Systems and models
PDF
ENV100_systems_thinking. slides.pdf
PPTX
IBDP ESS Topic 1.2 Systems and Models.pptx
PDF
1.2 systems and models notes
PPTX
Summary of topic 1.2
PDF
Systems Modeling Overview
PPTX
Topic 1 Systems and models
PDF
Environmental Systems And Societies Answers Andrew Davis Garrett Nagle
PPTX
System approach in Geography
PPTX
3. ESS Systems and Feedback Notes
PPTX
1 Teacher Foundations of ESS Slideshow Revision
KEY
Ess topic 1 review
PDF
1.1.1 .3 (1)
PDF
1.1.1 .3 (2)
PDF
DOC
Ess student course guide
PDF
MSc ESS GSandP-1
PPTX
Unidad pai 2 introducción inglés
1.2 Systems and models ESS Resource.pptx
topic 1 specifically 1.2 ess: systems and models
Systems and models
ENV100_systems_thinking. slides.pdf
IBDP ESS Topic 1.2 Systems and Models.pptx
1.2 systems and models notes
Summary of topic 1.2
Systems Modeling Overview
Topic 1 Systems and models
Environmental Systems And Societies Answers Andrew Davis Garrett Nagle
System approach in Geography
3. ESS Systems and Feedback Notes
1 Teacher Foundations of ESS Slideshow Revision
Ess topic 1 review
1.1.1 .3 (1)
1.1.1 .3 (2)
Ess student course guide
MSc ESS GSandP-1
Unidad pai 2 introducción inglés
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
GENETICS IN BIOLOGY IN SECONDARY LEVEL FORM 3
PDF
grade 11-chemistry_fetena_net_5883.pdf teacher guide for all student
PPTX
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
PDF
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
PPTX
Introduction-to-Literarature-and-Literary-Studies-week-Prelim-coverage.pptx
PDF
A systematic review of self-coping strategies used by university students to ...
PDF
LNK 2025 (2).pdf MWEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHE
PDF
Classroom Observation Tools for Teachers
PDF
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
PDF
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
PDF
Yogi Goddess Pres Conference Studio Updates
PPTX
school management -TNTEU- B.Ed., Semester II Unit 1.pptx
PPTX
Tissue processing ( HISTOPATHOLOGICAL TECHNIQUE
PPTX
Cell Structure & Organelles in detailed.
PPTX
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx
PDF
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
PDF
OBE - B.A.(HON'S) IN INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE -Ar.MOHIUDDIN.pdf
PPTX
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
PDF
Black Hat USA 2025 - Micro ICS Summit - ICS/OT Threat Landscape
PDF
The Lost Whites of Pakistan by Jahanzaib Mughal.pdf
GENETICS IN BIOLOGY IN SECONDARY LEVEL FORM 3
grade 11-chemistry_fetena_net_5883.pdf teacher guide for all student
202450812 BayCHI UCSC-SV 20250812 v17.pptx
Module 4: Burden of Disease Tutorial Slides S2 2025
Introduction-to-Literarature-and-Literary-Studies-week-Prelim-coverage.pptx
A systematic review of self-coping strategies used by university students to ...
LNK 2025 (2).pdf MWEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHEHE
Classroom Observation Tools for Teachers
Complications of Minimal Access Surgery at WLH
Trump Administration's workforce development strategy
Yogi Goddess Pres Conference Studio Updates
school management -TNTEU- B.Ed., Semester II Unit 1.pptx
Tissue processing ( HISTOPATHOLOGICAL TECHNIQUE
Cell Structure & Organelles in detailed.
History, Philosophy and sociology of education (1).pptx
Chinmaya Tiranga quiz Grand Finale.pdf
OBE - B.A.(HON'S) IN INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE -Ar.MOHIUDDIN.pdf
Microbial diseases, their pathogenesis and prophylaxis
Black Hat USA 2025 - Micro ICS Summit - ICS/OT Threat Landscape
The Lost Whites of Pakistan by Jahanzaib Mughal.pdf

1.2 Systems and models

  • 1. 1.2 Systems and models Monday, October 26, 2015 Scott Lucas Dwight School London, 2015
  • 2. Assessment statements Significant ideas • A systems approach can help in the study of complex environmental issues. • The use of systems and models simplifies interactions but may provide a more holistic view without reducing issues to single processes.
  • 3. Knowledge and understanding • A systems approach is a way of visualizing a complex set of interactions which may be ecological or societal. • These interactions produce the emergent properties of the system. • The concept of a system can be applied at a range of scales [Biosphere refers to the part of the Earth inhabited by organisms that extends from the upper parts of the atmosphere to deep within the Earth’s crust.] • A system is comprised of storages and flows. • The flows provide inputs and outputs of energy and matter. • The flows are processes that may be either transfers (a change in location) or transformations (a change in the chemical nature, a change in state or a change in energy).
  • 4. Knowledge and understanding • In system diagrams, storages are usually represented as rectangular boxes and flows as arrows, with the direction of each arrow indicating the direction of each flow. The size of the boxes and the arrows may be representative of the size/magnitude of the storage or flow. • An open system exchanges both energy and matter across its boundary while a closed system exchanges only energy across its boundary. • An isolated system is a hypothetical concept in which neither energy nor matter is exchanged across the boundary. • Ecosystems are open systems; closed systems only exist experimentally, although the global geochemical cycles approximate to closed systems. • A model is a simplified version of reality and can be used to understand how a system works and to predict how it will respond to change. • A model inevitably involves some approximation and therefore loss of accuracy.
  • 5. Applications and skills • Construct a system diagram or a model from a given set of information. [Students should interpret given system diagrams and use data to produce their own for a variety of examples, such as carbon cycling, food production and soil systems.] [Students are not expected to know any particular system diagram symbols such as those of Odum or Sankey.] • Evaluate the use of models as a tool in a given situation, for example, climate change predictions.
  • 6. International-mindedness • The use of models facilitates international collaboration in science by removing language barriers that may exist.
  • 7. Vocabulary • System: • Model: • Storages: • Flows: • Inputs: • Outputs: • Energy: • Matter: • Transfers: • Transformations:
  • 8. Significant idea (SI1.2.1): A systems approach can help in the study of complex environment issues U1.2.1 A systems approach is a way of visualizing a complex set of interactions which may be ecological or societal • The environment is a set of systems that interact • Scientists develop models to show the interactions between each component in a system • By nature, models involve simplification of the system • A 1:1 model would be as complex as the system itself; a bit like having a 1:1 city map, the map would be as large as the city itself • Other systems interact with the environment • Economic, societal, political, etc.
  • 9. Significant idea (SI1.2.1): A systems approach can help in the study of complex environment issues U1.2.1 A systems approach is a way of visualizing a complex set of interactions which may be ecological or societal • Abstract or tangible systems are represented using diagrams • Systems interact and exchange inputs and outputs of matter and energy (living systems); or information (non-living systems)
  • 10. U1.2.2 These interactions produce the emergent properties of the system • A systems is more than the sum of its parts • A computer is more than a bunch of metals and plastic
  • 11. U1.2.3 The concept of a system can be applied to a range of scales • A system can be • Living or non-living • On a range of scales, examples include • A cell, you, a bike, a car, your home, a pond, an ocean, a smart phone, a farm, Earth, etc • Open, closed or isolated; though most are open including living systems • Ecosystems are on a range of scales • A drop of pond water, an ocean; a tree, a forest; a coral reff to an island; a biome or the biosphere
  • 12. U1.2.4 A system comprises of storages and flows U1.2.5 The flows provide inputs and outputs of energy and matter • Storages are where energy or matter remains as stock or storages • Flows are where energy or matter move between storages (inputs and outputs)
  • 14. U1.2.6 The flows are processes and may be either transfers (a change in location) or transformations (a change in chemical nature, a change in state or a change in energy) • Matter and energy flow (move) through ecosystems as • Transfers (change in location) • Water from river to ocean • Chemical energy of animal being eaten by another animal • Ocean currents carrying heat • Transformations (change in state) • Matter to matter: glucose to starch, solid to liquid to gas • Energy to energy: light to heat by radiating surfaces • Energy to matter; light energy to chemical energy (photosynthesis) • Matter to energy: combustion
  • 15. U1.2.7 In system diagrams, storages are usually represented as rectangular boxes, and flows as arrows with the arrow indicating the direction of the flow. The size of the box and the arrow may represent the size/magnitude of the storage or flow.
  • 16. Energy and matter exchange in an immature forest
  • 18. Task: Construct a model of your home with storages and flows
  • 19. Types of systems • Three types: Open, Closed and Isolated 1. Open: exchanges energy and matter with its surroundings 2. Closed: exchanges energy but cycles matter 3. Isolated: exchanges neither energy nor matter
  • 20. U1.2.8 An open system exchanges both energy and matter across its boundary while a closed system only exchanges energy across its boundary U1.2.10 Ecosystems are open systems. Closed systems only exist experimentally although the global geochemical cycles approximate to closed systems • Open: exchanges energy and matter with its surroundings • For example: a forest ecosystem • Plants fix light via photosynthesis • Air nitrogen is fixed by soil bacteria • Herbivores may graze in other ecosystems i.e bordering grassland • Forest fires expose soil to erosion • Minerals are leached by rain and water • Water is lost is evaporation and transpiration • Heat is exchanged with surrounding environment
  • 21. U1.2.8 An open system exchanges both energy and matter across its boundary while a closed system only exchanges energy across its boundary U1.2.10 Ecosystems are open systems. Closed systems only exist experimentally although the global geochemical cycles approximate to closed systems • Closed: exchanges energy but cycles matter • Extremely rare in nature • Hydrological, carbon and nitrogen cycles • Earth is an “almost” closed system • Energy: Light energy enters and heat energy is radiated • Matter: very small amount of exchange; meteors and satellites • Artificial closed systems include experiments and sealed aquariums/terrariums eg. Bottle Garden • Don’t typically survive long as they become unbalanced eg. Biosphere 2 • Life in Biosphere 2 (TED Talk)
  • 22. U1.2.9 An isolated system is a hypothetical concept in which neither energy not matter is exchanged across the boundary • Isolated: exchanges neither energy nor matter • Do not exist naturally, hypothetically the universe is an isolated system Summary System Energy exchanged? Matter exchanged? Open Closed Isolated System Energy exchanged? Matter exchanged? Open Yes Yes Closed Yes No Isolated No No
  • 23. SI1.2.2: The use of models of systems simplifies interactions but may provide a more holistic view than reducing issues to single processes U1.2.11 A model is a simplified version of reality and can be used to understand how a system works and predict how it will respond to change U1.2.12 A model inevitably involves some approximation and loss of accuracy • Scientists use models to understand a system and predict the result of changes in the system • Models have limitations as they, by nature, are simplified so they don’t account for all interactions • Hard to make models accurate as all the interactions/rules may not be known/understood, or omitted for simplicity • A model can be: • physical, a wind tunnel, solar system model, aquarium/terrarium • software, model of climate change or evolution • Mathematical equations • Data flow diagrams
  • 24. SI1.2.2: The use of models of systems simplifies interactions but may provide a more holistic view than reducing issues to single processes U1.2.11 A model is a simplified version of reality and can be used to understand how a system works and predict how it will respond to change U1.2.12 A model inevitably involves some approximation and loss of accuracy • Strengths • Easier to work with than complex reality • Can be used to predict the effect of change of input • Can be applied to other similar situations • Help us see patterns • Can be used to visualize really small things (atoms) and really large things (solar system) • Weaknesses • Accuracy is lost due to simplification • If assumptions are wrong, the model is wrong • Predictions may be inaccurate • “Models are only as good as the rules used to create it” (BBC Bitesize)
  • 25. Gaia model (pg 25) • In 1979, James Lovelock published a theory about the Earth as an organism, one large system composed of smaller systems and components • Feedbacks, predominantly negative (see 1.3), regulate things such as • The temperature of Earth’s surface • The composition of the atmosphere • The ocean’s salinity
  • 26. S1.2.1 Construct a system diagram or a model from a given set of information
  • 27. S1.2.2 Evaluate the use of models as a tool in a given situation, eg for climate change predictions
  • 31. Task: complete the systems Burning candle Boiling kettle A plant Animal population Inputs Outputs Transfers Transformations
  • 33. Visit ProjectEd for more resources https://sites.google.com/a/dwightlondon.org/projected/
  • 34. Works Cited • International Baccalaureate Organization. Diploma Programme Environmental systems and societies guide. The Hague: IB Publishing Ltd, Feb. 2015. PDF. • "Modelling with Spreadsheets." BBC News. BBC, n.d. Web. 13 Aug. 2015. <http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/ict/m odelling/0spreadsheetsrev5.shtml>. • Rutherford, Jill. Environmental Systems and Societies. Oxford: OUP, 2015. Print.