The Guardian (USA)

Teaching climate crisis in classrooms critical for children, top educators say

- Oliver Milman

Joe Biden’s efforts to tackle the climate crisis need to extend to American classrooms with routine lessons on the threats posed by global heating, two former US education secretarie­s have urged.

In a letter to the Democratic president-elect, the former top education officials – John King and Arne Duncan – said the education of more than 50 million children in US public schools provides a “critical opportunit­y” to prepare them for a world transforme­d by climate change, as well as the opportunit­ies afforded by renewable energy and other potential solutions to the crisis.

“Supporting students today in learning about climate change and providing the opportunit­y to explore and consider climate solutions will increase the resilience of our society as well as our competitiv­eness in a green economy,” states the letter.

The statement was also signed by Christine Todd Whitman and Gina McCarthy, both former administra­tors of the US Environmen­tal Protection Agency, Sally Jewell, the former interior secretary, and a dozen other climate activists, education specialist­s and teacher union representa­tives.

Biden has vowed to use the breadth of the federal government to address the climate crisis, from state department diplomacy to the levers of economic policy. But the letter urges Biden to not overlook the department of education in this quest, suggesting emissions could be cut from sources such as school buses as well as encouragin­g the uptake of climate-themed lessons.

“The education secretary could use the bully pulpit to talk about the importance of climate change education, which would be useful to leading the way,” King, who was education secretary in Barack Obama’s administra­tion, told the Guardian.

“There are a lot of students not learning about climate change at all when the science is quite settled on this. Young people will have to navigate a world deeply impacted by climate change so they need to learn about that, not just the science of it but the social and economic consequenc­es,” King added.

In the US’s decentrali­zed education system, individual school districts, or schools themselves, decide upon classroom curriculum rather than the federal government. But King said federal investment to provide more science teachers, shift school buildings to renewable energy or supply locally grown food would help spur climate discussion­s in schools.

“We need school districts to understand we need to teach climate change and issues of environmen­tal justice,” King said. “We have a collective responsibi­lity to let students know.”

This summer, New Jersey became the first state to mandate climate change lessons at every grade level. Even though the edict won’t come into force until next year, several New Jersey schools have already started on work that includes seventh graders writing a climate change essay based on America the Not So Beautiful by Andy Rooney and ninth-grade students learning about rising temperatur­es and how people are being displaced by climate change.

“Our state is warming fast, our shoreline is vanishing – we are in the middle of a climate crisis as we speak,” Tammy Murphy, New Jersey’s first lady and architect of the climate education policy, told the Guardian. “If we don’t

 ?? Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images ?? An overwhelmi­ng majority of both teachers and parents agree that it should be a standard feature of classroom learning.
Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images An overwhelmi­ng majority of both teachers and parents agree that it should be a standard feature of classroom learning.

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