This book highlights best practices in climate change education through the analysis of a rich collection of case studies that showcase educational programs across the United States.
Framed against the political backdrop of a country in which climate change denial presents a significant threat to global action for mitigation and adaptation, each case study examines the various strategies employed by those working in this increasingly challenging sociopolitical environment. Via co-authored chapters written by educational researchers and climate change education practitioners in conversation with one another, a wide range of education programs is represented. These range from traditional institutions such as K-12 schools and universities to the contemporary learning environments of museums and environmental education centres. The role of mass media and community-level educational initiatives is also examined. The authors cover a multitude of topics, including the challenge of multi-stakeholder projects, tensions between indigenous knowledge and scientific research, education for youth activism, and professional learning.
By telling stories of success and failure from the field, this book provides climate change researchers and educators with tools to help them navigate increasingly rough and rising waters.
Recenzijos
"Climate change is not just the greatest crisis we face, it's also a prism through which to understand the world: politics, economics, psychology, you name it. That's why, as this book makes clear, this can be an exciting if solemn moment for educators willing to take on the real meaning of our moment." -- Bill McKibben, author of Falter: Has the Human Game Begun to Play Itself Out?, USA
"Classroom teachers and educators of all types have long understood that teaching climate change cant stop at the science. Young people are hungry for action. Teaching Climate Change in the United States is the first-of-its-kind effort to show the breadth and depth at which true climate education education that engages and empowers young people to take on the defining crisis of our time is already happening across our country. This is a book to encourage and inspire climate educators of all types to know that they are not alone, but are instead one piece of a growing and vital climate education and action community." -- Rebecca Anderson, Director of Education, Alliance for Climate Education, USA
"It is encouraging to see a US-based collection address how education can challenge forms of climate denial which limit our collective capacity for action. Research recognizes that climate change education needs to go beyond scientific literacy to also engage learners in psycho-social and behavioral understanding. This book brings this alive through practical examples from settings across the US." -- Marcia McKenzie, Director, Sustainability and Education Policy Network, Canada
"Anyone involved in improving and expanding climate change education, particularly beyond middle and high school science classrooms, will find the essays contained in Teaching Climate Change in the United States to be a useful source of information and guidance as they pursue their own projects. And anyone who appreciates the urgent and continuing necessity for education for climate literacy and climate action will find the stories of struggle and success to be nothing short of inspiring." -- Glenn Branch, Deputy Director of NCSE
1. Teaching Climate Change in the United States Joseph A. Henderson and
Andrea Drewes
2. Empowering Children to Change Hearts and Minds on Climate
Change Against All Odds Kathryn T. Stevenson, Danielle F. Lawson, M. Nils
Peterson, and Starr Binner
3. Fostering Climate Literacy with Global Climate
Models in Secondary Science Classrooms Cory Forbes et al.
4. Conversations on
Climate Change Pedagogies in a Central Texas Kindergarten Classroom Fikile
Nxumalo and Libby Berg
5. Teaching Climate in the Humanities Classroom Alana
Siegner and Natalie Stapert
6. Climate Change Professional Development
Approaches MADE CLEAR Andrea Drewes, Melissa J. B. Rogers, and Christopher
Petrone
7. Becoming a Persistent Professional Development Community for
Informal Educators Addressing Climate Change Cathlyn Davis Stylinski et al.
8. Working the Professional Organizations Don A. Haas and Eric J. Pyle
9.
Applied Social Science to Scale Climate Communications Impact William Spitzer
10. Taking Back Our Future Jen Kretser and Erin Griffin
11. Engagement for
Climate Action Nicole Barbara Rom and Kristen Lee Iverson Poppleton
12.
Creative Climate Communications Patrick Chandler, Beth Osnes, and Maxwell
Boykoff
13. Science Alone Will Not Save Us, Civic Engagement Might. Peter D.
Buckland, Brandi J. Robinson, and Michael E. Mann
14. Afterword: Facing the
Climate Crisis with Courage Laura Faye Tenenbaum
Joseph Henderson is a lecturer in the Department of Environment and Society at Paul Smiths College of the Adirondacks in Upstate New York, where he teaches courses in the environmental social sciences. He is trained as an anthropologist of environmental and science education, and his research investigates how sociocultural, political, and geographic factors influence teaching and learning in emerging energy and climate systems. He completed a PhD at the University of Rochester, where he conducted ethnographic analyses of science learning, sustainability education, and educational policy. His post-doctoral work at the University of Delaware examined the emerging field of climate change education from a learning sciences and educational policy perspective.
Andrea Drewes is an assistant professor in the Department of Graduate Education, Leadership, and Counseling at Rider University, Lawrenceville, New Jersey, where she teaches courses in teacher education. She is trained as a learning scientist, and her research has focused on teacher preparation for climate change instruction and student learning outcomes in climate science education. She completed a PhD at the University of Delaware, where she investigated personal, professional, and political influences on science teacher identity development for teaching climate change through a narrative inquiry with climate change educators.