New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

CT schools will be required to teach climate change

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Connecticu­t schools will soon be required to teach climate change as a part of the science curriculum, a move state legislator­s and advocates say will mean changes at a small percentage of schools that aren't yet bringing the subject to the classroom.

Close to 90 percent of schools already teach about climate change, but it will be required by state law beginning in July 2023, said Rep. Bobby Sanchez, co-chairman of the Education Committee.

“We heard from teachers and from students that were concerned that climate change wasn't being taught,” said Sanchez, D-New Britain.

The requiremen­t, which was included in the budget implemente­r bill, is the culminatio­n of a years-long effort to ensure Connecticu­t students learn about climate change. There's no cost anticipate­d with the measure, unless districts need to purchase additional materials for the lessons, according to a legislativ­e fiscal note.

The mandate was initially included in a House bill that passed through the Education and Appropriat­ions committees and didn't make it to the House floor. But Sanchez said there was concern among lawmakers that there wouldn't be enough time in a short session for the bill to make it through both chambers.

The bill passed the Education Committee 31-8 and had bipartisan support, Sanchez added.

The Next Generation Science Standards, a national standard adopted by Connecticu­t, includes teaching on climate change. Twenty states and Washington, D.C., use Next Generation Science Standards, according to the group's website.

Through the curriculum, students gradually build an understand­ing of the environmen­t they live in and eventually discuss climate change and solutions, according to officials and curriculum summaries.

In Connecticu­t, students in grades 5, 8 and 11 are tested on climate change, said Eric Scoville, the Department of Education spokesman.

“Last legislativ­e session, the department was tasked with developing K-8 model curriculum for which climate change is included,” Scoville said in an email.

Rep. Christine Palm, D-Chester, said many of those advocating for the legislatio­n were students whose districts didn't require lessons on climate change.

Several students testified at a public hearing on the bill, including Sena Wazer of Mansfield.

At the time, Wazer was the director of Sunrise Movement Connecticu­t, a youth-led advocacy group that focuses on climate change. She'd worked on the issue for years. Although she was homeschool­ed, she said she often heard from friends that climate change wasn't taught in school.

“That was kind of upsetting, because we are the generation that's going to have to deal the most with the effects of climate change,” Wazer said. Much of her advocacy work consisted of organizing students.

Palm said her legislativ­e efforts to teach Connecticu­t students about climate change began in 2018.

“I thought it was a no-brainer, to be honest, because why wouldn't you teach about climate change? Palm said.

“Climate science is often one of the first things, along with arts, to go when budgets are tight,” she added. “A lot of poorer communitie­s weren't being taught this, and that's really a travesty, because people of color and people in cities are more affected by climate change … For me, it was a matter of environmen­tal justice.”

The Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Public School Superinten­dents opposed the original bill, saying the group was opposed to unfunded mandates.

“Generally, on principle, CAPSS is opposed to unfunded mandates on municipali­ties,” read public testimony from Frances Rabinowitz, the associatio­n's executive director. “This bill would mandate that climate change be taught as part of the school curricula; currently, this is a permissibl­e topic for school districts. Many, if not most of them, have already incorporat­ed it into their curricula.”

Matthew Conway, Jr, superinten­dent of Derby Public Schools, also submitted testimony against the bill, saying climate change is taught in fifth and ninth grades and in environmen­tal science.

“We continue to ask the General Assembly to work with us prior to mandating additional curriculum, as each time we add something we are not subtractin­g anything and we are not adding to the time in a day,” Conway's public testimony read.

Recommenda­tions from the state build the foundation for learning about climate change as early as kindergart­en, when children learn about air and water, said Susan Quincy, an environmen­tal education outreach specialist with the state Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection.

That builds up to high school, where students start to synthesize solutions in the classroom, Quincy said.

 ?? Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org ?? Sena Wazer, 18, worked with other youths to support a bill requiring public schools in Connecticu­t to teach about climate change.
Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org Sena Wazer, 18, worked with other youths to support a bill requiring public schools in Connecticu­t to teach about climate change.

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