Wellbeing General
Indicators of Wellbeing
Environments and change
Factors affecting wellbeing
Environment Management
100

What is “human wellbeing”?

The quality of life people experience and their ability to access what they need to live happy, healthy, fulfilling lives.

100

What is an “indicator”?

A measurement used to assess a specific aspect of wellbeing or development.

100

What is the 'climate emergency'? 

Refers to urgent action needed to prevent severe climate impacts caused by human-induced global warming

100

Name one environmental factor that affects wellbeing.

Climate, drought, or flood affecting food security.

100

Define environmental management and provide 3 examples

Plans and actions that people or organisations implement to handle and solve environmental problems to make the environment safer, protect communities, and ensure resources are used wisely.

•WA state-wide single-use plastic ban  1 Oct 2022 as a strategy to reduce the amount of plastic ending up in our landfills and waterways, where it does not biodegrade and contributes to harmful microplastics to the environment

•WA residential battery scheme: one-off rebates or no-interest loans to purchase a battery for your home solar-panel system = decreases fossil fuel emissions as most of WA’s energy still comes from burning gas and oil

•building barriers like flood walls to keep water out (hard engineering strategy) or creating early warning systems to inform people when a flood is coming (soft engineering strategy).

200

What is Australia's level of wellbeing? Is this is the same for everyone in the country?

Very high level of wellbeing, ranked 7th on the HDI. Wellbeing is higher for non-indigenous people than for Indigenous people due to a variety of factors stemming from colonisation, the Stolen Generation, and the impact intergenerational trauma.
200

What three factors make up the HDI?

Life expectancy, education (years of schooling), and income (GNI per capita).

200

What is meant by the 'Enhanced Greenhouse Effect'?

The enhanced greenhouse effect occurs due to human activity creating increased amounts of greenhouse gases (through burning fossil fuels, fertiliser, building industry, deforestation, animal agriculture) which trap more heat in Earth's atmosphere, warming the planet more than the natural effect.

200

Give one political and one historical factor that can reduce wellbeing.

Political – corruption or conflict; Historical – colonisation or past war.

200

What can governments do to fight climate change?

Governments can fund green infrastructure, set emissions targets, create laws to protect ecosystems, and invest in public transport and renewables.

300

Give two examples of high wellbeing indicators.

High literacy rate, long life expectancy, low infant mortality, good access to healthcare.

300

Give three examples of indicators we use to measure wellbeing. 

Then explain what one of these examples would be for a high HDI country and a low HDI country. 

Literacy rate; birth rate; GDP per capita

Literacy rate - high literacy rate in a high HDI country (Australia), low literacy rate in low HDI country (Afghanistan). 

Birth rate - high birth rate in a low HDI country (Nigeria); low birth rate in a high HDI country (Japan)

GDP per capita - high GDP in a high HDI country (German); low GDP in a low HDI country (South Sudan)

300

Describe the relationship between carbon dioxide and global temperatures.

As we've seen increased carbon in the atmosphere due to the burning of fossil fuels for human activity, the global temperature has also risen due to the greenhouse effect.

300

How can social or cultural factors influence wellbeing?

Gender inequality or limited education restrict opportunities.

300

How can renewable energy reduce climate change?

They produce little or no greenhouse gases, replacing fossil fuels and lowering atmospheric CO₂. This in turn reduces the enhanced greenhouse effect which is causing rising temperatures which then causes increased strength and frequency of destructive storms, flooding, fires, etc.

400

Explain one reason why wellbeing varies between regions.

Differences in wealth, resources, education, and political stability affect wellbeing levels.

400

Why is HDI a better measure than GDP alone?

It includes social and educational dimensions, not just income, giving a fuller picture of wellbeing.

400

Describe the carbon cycle and carbon sinks.

The carbon cycle moves carbon through the atmosphere, land, and oceans. Carbon enters the atmosphere through human and animal respiration, decay of dead organisms, burning of forests and fossil fuels. Carbon sinks like forests, soils, algae/sea weed, plants, and oceans absorb CO₂, reducing warming.

400

How does Education impact wellbeing? Give examples for great access to education vs poor access to education. Think about what else it impacts. 

The more education society has the better their chances at earning higher incomes. With a higher income people are better able to achieve their needs and wants- which means they can pay for more nutritious food, pay for healthcare which keeps them healthy and living longer, etc.
400

What is land cover change, provide examples. 

Alterations made to the surface of the earth. Humans change land cover via farming, urbanisation, war, and deforestation. Natural disasters like fires, floods or volcanoes also reshape landscapes.

500

Explain the difference between absolute and relative poverty, and give an example of each.

Absolute poverty = not having enough income to meet basic needs (e.g. food, shelter, water). Relative poverty = having less income than others in the same society (e.g. low-income households in Australia).

500

Thinking of a world map of HDI, describe the global pattern of wellbeing and identify one exception to the general trend.

HDI is highest in Europe and North America, and lowest in Sub-Saharan Africa and parts of South Asia. Exception: Some countries like Cuba or Costa Rica have high wellbeing despite lower GDPs.

500

Describe the 4 S’s of environmental functions.

Source: acts as a provision of natural resources like food water and raw materials, lumber from trees, gold and other minerals, fish

Sink: acts as waste absorption (e.g. CO₂), oceans, soil, trees are a carbon sink.

Service: provides life-giving cycles/benefits like pollination, water cycle, photosynthesis

Spiritual: value it holds in terms of recreation, pscyholoyg, aesthetics and spirituality, mountain biking, scuba diving, hiking, meditating, 'forest bathing'

500

Explain how two of the following factors might interact to influence wellbeing: political, environmental, or technological.

Example: Poor political leadership may limit investment in technology, reducing access to clean energy and worsening environmental conditions, which lowers wellbeing.

500

Name the three most important greenhouse gases and human/natural sources.

Methane - CH₄ – production of fossil fuels, cattle and sheep, wetlands

Carbon Dioxide - CO2 - burning fossil fuels, decomposing organic matter, volcanic eruptions, forest/bush fires, deforestation

Nitrous oxide - N2O - agricultural fertilisers, burning fossil fuels, industry

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