DRRR Q1 Module 1 2 2021
DRRR Q1 Module 1 2 2021
DRRR Q1 Module 1 2 2021
Risk Reduction
Quarter 1 – Module 1 & 2
Basic Concept of Disaster
and Disaster Risk
What I Need to Know
This module is intended to help you understand the concept of disaster.
Disasters are reality. Perhaps our most potent response to it must be awareness,
knowledge, and understanding of this reality. Hence, this first lesson provides you, our
dear learners with a basic but thorough grounding on the concept of disaster and how
and when an event turns into a disaster.
The Module is intended to equip you with knowledge to explain the basic concept of
disaster.
Lesson
What is Disaster and
1 Disaster Risk?
In this module, the learners will hold an understanding about disaster and
develop a firm grasp of a very crucial factor that has direct bearing on disaster
and disaster risk.
What’s In
1. _____________________________________
2. _____________________________________
3. _____________________________________
4. _____________________________________
5. _____________________________________
What’s New
Activity 1.1 Understanding Disaster
Instructions: Analyze the given images and answer the given questions below:
What is It
IT’S A DISASTER
Disaster is "a sudden, calamitous occurrence that causes great harm,
injury, destruction, and devastation to life and property”. It disrupts the usual
course of life, causing both physical and emotional distress such as an intense
feeling of helplessness and hopelessness. A preceding definition of disaster
stresses that two elements are affected – life (whether human or animal) and
property. The effects vary – it maybe a minor damage (like broken windows and
doors), major damage (like torn rooftops, collapsed walls), total destruction (like
completely destroyed houses and structures rendering them useless and
inhabitable) and the worst scenario, it can lead to death. (Asian Disaster
Preparedness Center, ADPC, 2012)
Disasters are often a result of the combination of: the exposure to a hazard;
the conditions of vulnerability that are present; and insufficient capacity or
measures to reduce or cope with the potential negative consequences.
Its impacts may include loss of life, injury, disease and other negative effects
on human physical, mental, and social wellbeing, together with damage to
properties, destruction of assets, loss of services, social and economic disruptions,
and environmental degradation.
Image 1. Different kinds of Natural Disasters
Classification of Disasters:
2. Terrorism/Violence - the threat of terrorism has also increased due to the spread of
technologies involving nuclear, biological, and chemical agents used to develop
weapons of mass destruction.
EXAMPLE: conflicts or wars and Genocide the deliberate killing of a large group of
people, especially those of a particular ethnic group or nation
“Disasters and their Effects on the Population: Key Concepts,”, Accessed on 02 June2020, pages 7-10,
https://www.aap.org/en-us/Documents/disasters_ dpac_PEDsModule1. pdf
The damage caused by disaster cannot be measured. It also differs with the
kind of geographical location, climate, earth’s specific characteristics, and level of
vulnerability. These determining factors affect generally the psychological, socio –
economic, political, and ethnical state of the affected area.
What’s More
Activity 1.2 FIX ME!!!
Instruction: Arranged the given jumbled letters to identify the correct
terminology. The definition will help you to derive the correct answer. Answering
this activity will develop your visual and analysis skills. Write your answer in your
answer sheet.
Classifying Disaster
(Natural or Man-Made)
________________________________ ________________________________
"File:Ezra Acayan Mayon pic.jpg" by "Toxic Metal Barrel" by azzajess is
Ezra Acayan, licensed under CC BY-SA licensed under CC BY-NC 4.0
4.0
________________________________ ________________________________
"Motor Vehicle Accident at Clinton and "6.0 Magnitude Earthquake in the City
Lafayette Ave" by cisc1970 is licensed of Napa" by Cal OES is licensed under
under CC BY-NC 2.0 CC BY-NC 2.0
_______________________________ _______________________________
Guide Question:
Based on the presented images, how will you differentiate natural from manmade
disasters? Explain your answer in 2-3 sentences. Write your answer on a separate
sheet of paper.
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
___________________________________________________________________________
Given the table, give a natural disaster you experienced within your locality or you
had heard from the news recently. What makes it a natural disaster? 1. Give a
man-made disaster you experienced within your locality or you had heard from
the news recently.
Classification of
Disaster Disaster Risks
Disasters
(Natural or Man-Made) (Effects)
1. typhoon
2. war conflicts
3. volcanic eruption
4. chemical leakages
5. vehicular accident
6. earthquake
7. drought
8. thunderstorms
9. tuberculosis
10. rainfall-induced
landslide
12. avalanche
13. tsunami
15. house
Stop and Reflect
Now review your previous Activity number 1.3 and 1.4. Do you think the
given ideas/concepts are clear for you to understand different kinds of disasters
that the country has experienced including its disaster risks?
Agree or Disagree?
Exit Ticket
Have you learned so much from this module? What are the three
things that you learned today? What are the two things you found
interesting?
2._________________________________________
3. ________________________________________
2. ____________________________________
1 Question I have 1. ________________________________________
Assessment
Choose the letter of the best answer. Write the chosen letter on a separate
sheet of paper.
References
Mahar, Patrick, et.al, “Disasters and their Effects on the Population: Key
Concepts,” Accessed (01 June 2020),
https://www.aap.org/enus/Documents/disasters_dpac_PEDsMod ule1.
“Disasters and their Effects on the Population: Key Concepts,”, Accessed on
02 June 2020, pp. 7-10,
https://www.aap.org/enus/Documents/disasters_dpac_PEDsM odule1.
“Defining the Concepts”, Introduction to Disaster Risk Reduction, USAID from the
American people, pp.6-13, https://www.preventionweb.
net/files/26081_kp1concepdisasterrisk1.
Prepared by:
JUNNEL L. ANDRADE
SHS Teacher I
Disaster Readiness and
Risk Reduction
Quarter 1 – Module 2:
What I Need to Know
This module is intended to help you understand the risk factors
underlying disasters. This course focuses on the application of scientific
knowledge and the solution of practical problems in a
physical environment.
Lesson
Differentiating Risk Factors
1 Underlying Disaster
In this module, the learner will understand that disaster can bring about many
devastating effects. Upon identifying the risk factors underlying disaster, this will
provide ideas to mitigate the effects of disasters that can lead to death, destruction of
infrastructures, loss of livelihoods, and even non-physical events like emotional and
psychological aspects.
What’s In
At Risk…
Disaster can affect everyone. It does not discriminate between and among social
classes, gender, creed, race, and nationality. But certain risk factors put those affected
in a position where they will have graver or longer-lasting post-disaster stress reactions.
These aggravating factors contribute to evident differences in the stress reactions of
certain individuals with certain characteristics.
Activity 1.1:
Direction: Read the scenario below. Based on your understanding of disaster from the
previous module, enumerate or list down the risks that are reflected from the text.
What’s New
Activity 1.2 Identifying Risk Factors
Direction: Read the news article about an earthquake. After you have read the article,
answer the guide questions.
The quake struck off the coast of the southern town of Manay at 3.16 pm at a depth
of 14km, the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) said in a
statement.
While there were no immediate reports of serious destruction, the institute said it
expects the earthquake to have caused some damage.
A lot of people ran from their homes because a lot of items were falling inside," The
Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) is a service institute of
the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) that is principally mandated to
mitigate disasters that may arise from volcanic eruptions, earthquakes, tsunami and
other related geotectonic phenomena. PHIVOLCS science researcher John Deximo said.
The Philippines lies on the so-called Ring of Fire, a vast Pacific Ocean region where
many earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur.
At least two people were killed and scores injured when a 6.5-magnitude quake struck
the central Philippines in July last year.
The most recent major quake to hit the Philippines was in 2013, when a 7.1magnitude
quake left more than 220 people dead and destroyed historic churches in the central
islands.
France-Presse, Agence, “6.4-Magnitude Earthquake Shakes Southern Philippines”THE STRAIT TIMES ASIA, 09
September 2018, SGT https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/64-magnitudeearthquakeshakes-southern-
philippines
Guide Questions:
1. What risk/s can you identify from the news article?
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________ 2. What
do you think are the factors that affect the disaster risks from the preceding article?
______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________
What is It
RISK FACTORS
Disaster risk as defined in the first module, has three important elements such as:
Gender and Family - the female gender suffers more adverse effects. This worsens
when children are present at home. Marital relationships are placed under strain.
Age - adults in the age range of 40-60 are more stressed after disasters but in
general, children exhibit more stress after disasters than adults do.
Magbool, Irfan, Asian Disaster Preparedness Center, ADPC, 31 December 2012,
https://www.adpc.net/igo/contents/adpcpage.asp?pid=1266&dep=RIG
1. Climate Change - can increase disaster risk in a variety of ways – by altering the
frequency and intensity of hazards events, affecting vulnerability to hazards, and
changing exposure patterns. For most people, the expression “climate change” means
the alteration of the world’s climate that we humans are causing such as burning of
fossil fuels, deforestation and other practices that increase the carbon footprint and
concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. This is in line with the official
definition by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
that climate change is the change that can be attributed “directly or indirectly to human
activity that alters the composition of the global atmosphere and which is in addition to
natural climate variability observed over comparable time periods”
International Strategy for Disaster Reduction, “Climate Change and Disaster Risk
Reduction”, September 2008
https://www.wmo.int/pages/prog/dra/vcp/documents/7607_Climate-Change-DRR.pdf
Prevention Web. Editor, “Globalized Economic Development”, Prevention Web. The Knowledge Platform
for Disaster Risk Reduction, 12 November 2015 https://www.preventionweb.net/risk/globalized-
economic-development
What’s More
Activity 1.3: What is the Risk Factor?
Direction: Analyze the given situation by identifying the correct risk factor. Write only
the letter that corresponds to your answer. To facilitate your task, accomplish the given
table below:
A. Climate Change
B. Environmental Degradation
F. Weak Governance
Situation Factor Underlying
Disaster
global Warming
Assessment
Choose the letter of the best answer. Write the chosen letter on a separate sheet of
paper.
4. Which of the following risk factors BEST describes the cause of COVID19 pandemic?
a. climate change c. globalized economic development
b. weak governance d. poorly- planned and managed urban development
5. It refers to the changes that can be attributed “directly or indirectly to human activity
altering the composition of the global atmosphere and additionally to the natural
climate variability observed over comparable periods of time”?
a. deforestation c. global warming
b. climate change d. carbon footprint
6. How will reduction of the level of vulnerability and exposure be possible?
a. proper knowledge on disaster risk
b. potentially damaging physical even
c. increase the susceptibility of a community to the impact of hazard
d. by keeping people and property as distant as possible from hazards
7. Which of the following risk factors affect with inequality?
a. poverty c. weak governance
b. climate change d. globalized economic development
8. Unwillingness to assume their roles and responsibilities in governing disaster risk
unit, falls under which of the following risk factors?
a. climate change c. poverty and inequality
b. weak governance d. environmental degradation
9. Which among the groups suffer more adverse effects when an earthquake causing
disaster occurs?
a. men and women c. old persons and women
b. children and women d. old persons and children
10. The occurrence of landslides in the Philippines is increasing. This kind of disaster
will fall under which of the following risks?
a. poverty and inequality
b. climate change and weak governance
c. climate change and environmental degradation
d. climate change and globalized economic development
11. The ages below are average years ranges affected by specific situations happening
as a disaster occurs. Which of the following age ranges are “Most Stressed-Out” after
a disaster according to Asian Disaster Preparedness Center (ADPC)?
a. 16-20 c. 30-40
b. 20-30 d. 40-60
12. Which of the following risk factors is the result in an increased polarization between
the rich and poor on a global scale?
a. climate change c. environmental degradation
b. poverty and inequality d. globalized economic development
13. Which of the following is NOT a contributor to the worst outcomes when a disaster
happened?
a. displacement c. death of someone close
b. can handle stress d. massive loss of property
14. Who among the following groups of people are more likely to live in hazard-exposed
areas and are less able to invest in risk-reducing measures based on most studies in
Asian Disaster Preparedness Center (ADPC)?
a. middle class c. young professionals
b. senior citizens d. mpoverished people
15. It is a risk factor that is both a driver and a consequence of disasters, reducing the
capacity of the environment to meet social and ecological needs, what is it?
a. climate change c. poverty and inequality
b. weak governance d. environmental degradation
References
France-Presse, Agence, “6.4-Magnitude Earthquake Shakes Southern Philippines” ,
09 September 2018. https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/seasia/64magnitude-
earthquake-shakes-southern-philippines
Prepared by:
JUNNEL L. ANDRADE
SHS Teacher I