ED31F-07
How Five Master Teachers Teach about Climate Chang

Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 09:30
303 (Moscone South)
Leonard Bloch, St. Andrew's Episcopal School, Saratoga, CA, United States
Abstract:
The AGU Position Statement, “Human-Induced Climate Change Requires Urgent Action,” calls on scientists to “[work] with stakeholders to identify relevant information, and [to convey] understanding clearly and accurately, both to decision makers and to the general public”. Everyday, K-12 teachers communicate with an important segment of the general public, and they represent important stakeholders with unique needs. The terms ‘global warming’, ‘greenhouse effect’, and ‘climate change’ appear nowhere in the 1996 National Science Education Standards, but under the Next Generation Science Standards, millions of teachers– most of whom have little to no experience teaching about climate change– will be required to cover the topic.

This presentation discusses research conducted with five veteran public school teachers, each of whom has been teaching about climate change for many years. The group comprises three high school teachers, a middle school teacher, and an elementary school teacher. The study examined: 1) What these teachers teach about climate change; 2) How they teach about climate change; 3) What resources they use in teaching and learning about climate change; and 4) How they think the scientific community can support teachers in their efforts to teach about climate change. The teachers varied in their teaching practices and in their conceptions of ‘climate change’, but they all said that the academic community can support climate change education by developing locally relevant educational resources.

Scientists working with K-12 teachers can build on the work of these master teachers, and attendees can access detailed descriptions of all of the lessons and the associated learning materials.