Posted on 12/10/2018 11:47:27 AM PST by Oldeconomybuyer
If the world doesnt make rapid and unprecedented changes in all aspects of society, a UN report warned this month, the effects of climate change will be dramatic and far-reaching - and not in some distant future, in the next 20 years. Even now, though, in most schools, climate change is still just starting to make its way into classrooms, and many teachers dont have the training or the resources they need to teach it.
On a hot, sunny day, right in the middle of August, a couple of teachers from Marthas Vineyard sat at picnic tables in the shade at the Cape Poge Wildlife Refuge, writing down observations about different shells that have been sitting in sea water or vinegar, and then smashing them with a hammer to see how easily they break.
They were trying out a lesson Shannon Hurley has come up with for middle schoolers, on the connection between climate change and ocean acidification. Hurley runs educational programs for schools across the Vineyard, going into schools and taking classes on field trips, for the Trustees of Reservations, a nonprofit that preserves land across Massachusetts.
Last year was the first year the Trustees ran a climate change specific program, on erosion, for second graders. This is the first year theyre expanding into middle school. Theyre able to do that in part because climate change is now officially in the state science standards in Massachusetts, as of 2016.
Oftentimes what we have to do is hit the standards, to make it valuable, time-wise, said Hurley, adding that now that climate change is part of what teachers have to address in certain grades, particularly in middle school, the Trustees are able to expand our offerings a lot more.
For a lot of teachers, professional development with organizations like the Trustees is the way to continue to grow your base knowledge that you already have, said Casey Hayward, who teaches fifth and sixth grade at Marthas Vineyard Public Charter School. She took a day out of her summer vacation to go to Hurleys workshop on Chappaquiddick. If we didnt have the Trustees doing programs like this, we would have to be doing a lot of this on our own.
Most of what she knows about climate change she has taught herself, Hayward said, by reading articles, listening to podcasts, and watching documentaries.
That's common, according to Pat Harcourt, who just finished up a study, funded by the National Science Foundation, looking at what works in climate change education. Most teachers, she said, typically havent had specific training in climate change. One reason for that is that its still new enough that there arent programs in place that are analogous to, say, molecular biology training.
Nationwide, more than half of teachers have had no formal education on climate change, according to a report from the National Center for Science Education. Not even a single lecture. Very few of those teachers have gone on to get professional development on the issue, just one in five.
That lack of training more than politics and controversy is the primary reason climate change is not taught more in schools, Harcourt found. Because of that, and the fact that its still a relatively new topic, she said, climate change is playing catch up.
Kate Skehill, a third grade teacher at East Falmouth Elementary School, finds herself trying to catch up all the time. Even though climate change does not explicitly appear in the third grade standards its actually spelled out that climate change knowledge and understanding is not really expected at this time, Skehill said she and her teaching partners in third grade have found places where they can fit it in to the things they do have to teach, like weather. Its a huge challenge, though, for her to find resources about climate change that are on a third grade level.
I have to take whatever the science is and sort of translate it to a third grade point of view, Skehill said. So if there were resources out there that already did that, that would be helpful.
There's that challenge, of finding resources; theres the fact that climate change is still a relatively new subject; and theres also the fact that theres never enough time.
Especially for a general educator, Skehill said, theres so much to keep us up to date on, that finding time to bring in new things, even new important things, even new important really cool things, is hard to do.
Still, she thinks its critical to fit it in where she can, she said, because its important for these kids to understand that whats happening with our climate is real, and that theyre going to be the ones in charge of coming up with the ideas and solutions to our very challenging problems.
For all the obstacles to getting more and more robust climate change education into classrooms, Shannon Hurley, of the Trustees, said the teachers and students she works with on the Vineyard have one big thing going for them, when it comes to learning about climate change.
Our island students have a better background, in a sense, at times, because they dont even realize that theyre learning about climate change when they are learning about climate change, she said.
Thats true on the Cape, too. Because its visible all around in the eroding dunes, in the bleached shells. They just have to learn where to look.
“Earth overheating, polar bears drowning..!”
What a great message for kids growing up, right..?
Why even TRY to improve yourself if the earth is going away..?
Those so called scientists still cannot answer what is the correct and ideal temperature that the earth should be at.
They are no longer even hiding that they are indoctrinating our children. I can’t imagine sending a child to public school in this political environment.
Shut off all heat and AC, lights, running water etc., to all public schools to help save the erf
Playing catch-up? Our schools have been the forefront of the global warming hysteria for about 2 decades. It doesn’t belong in schools at all. Try teaching kids to read and write instead or is that too much work when it’s so much easier to indoctrinate them and give them PTSD?
These girls are betting PTSD AND STDs from this joker.
Goebbelsian lies spread like the plague.
“If the world doesnt make rapid and unprecedented changes in all aspects of society, a UN report warned this month, the effects of climate change will be dramatic and far-reaching”
Translation: Send us all your money.
Their goal is to brainwash the next generation to aspire to less then the previous generation. That’s not a good path going forward.
Is her classroom air conditioned? Is it heated? Does she drive to school? Does she wear clothes to school? Does she eat in the school lunchroom? Bad, bad on her. Bet she’s even breathing.
The lesson for today, students, is do not steal the vinegar out of mama’s pantry and do not smash sea shells. What did the shells ever do to you? Put them back in the ocean for hermit crabs to live in.
80 during the daytime and 74 at night would be ideal for me.
The ocean is not acidic and is nothing like vinegar.
Seriously, it is long past time for the US to ask China and Russia to build their own UN buildings, with the idea that the UN would move to one of them for 50 years, then the other one for 50 years. I doubt they could resist the offer.
Then, after a hundred years of peace in the US, maybe we could persuade other nations to build their own UN buildings, like Somalia and Zimbabwe, etc.
Climate Change no longer Global Warming
A family member said they should have called climate change something else.
Have to ask next time I see him.
I thought we passed the point of no return 30 years ago.
So public schools{churches) need to properly teach climate change and gender change. I'm so glad we homeschooled our kids.
Meaning there some indoctrination asylums out there that haven't been adhering to the government's plan... Heads will roll!
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