Teaching, Learning, and Climate Change: Anticipated Impacts and Mitigation Strategies for Educators

被引:2
|
作者
Newsome, Donny [1 ]
Newsome, Kendra B. B. [1 ]
Miller, Scott A. A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Fit Learning, Reno, NV 89511 USA
关键词
Teaching; Learning; Education; Climate Change; Sustainability; BEHAVIORAL FLUENCY; COVID-19; WEALTH;
D O I
10.1007/s42822-023-00129-2
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The impacts of climate change present numerous risks to the present and future state of teaching and learning. Natural disasters such as hurricanes, heat waves, flooding, blizzards, wildfires, sea level rise, and droughts threaten our ability to produce the learning outcomes promised to our pupils. Taking action to adapt to imminent climate-related challenges and mitigating measures that provoke and prolong ecological challenges is critical to the survival of these cultural institutions. Paradoxically, centers of teaching and learning can be seen as both victims of climate change as well as an instrumental part of the solution. Providing an efficient and effective education to the world's youth is a catalyst for the innovations that future generations of skilled professionals will use to combat climate change. Educational settings are also crucial venues for raising social awareness about anthropogenic climate change to undermine the complacency and denialism that have stagnated the global response to this crisis thus far. This paper incorporates suggestions from climate scientists and learning scientists about how to change how we teach, where we teach, and what we teach to ensure teaching enterprises survive and thrive in the face of a changing climate.
引用
收藏
页码:494 / 516
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Assessing regional impacts and adaptation strategies for climate change: the Washington Climate Change Impacts Assessment
    Edward L. Miles
    Marketa M. Elsner
    Jeremy S. Littell
    Lara Whitely Binder
    Dennis P. Lettenmaier
    Climatic Change, 2010, 102 : 9 - 27
  • [42] Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation Strategies in Kenya
    Mwendwa, Patrick
    Giliba, Richard A.
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF POPULATION RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENT, 2012, 10 (04) : 22 - 29
  • [43] Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation Strategies in Kenya
    Patrick Mwendwa
    Richard A.Giliba
    ChineseJournalofPopulation,ResourcesandEnvironment, 2012, (04) : 22 - 29
  • [44] STRATEGIES FOR MODELING THE UNCERTAIN IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
    LIEBETRAU, AM
    SCOTT, MJ
    JOURNAL OF POLICY MODELING, 1991, 13 (02) : 185 - 204
  • [45] Climate change, mitigation and adaptation with uncertainty and learning
    Ingham, Alan
    Ma, Jie
    Ulph, Alistair
    ENERGY POLICY, 2007, 35 (11) : 5354 - 5369
  • [46] MAIZE PRODUCTION IN A CHANGING CLIMATE: IMPACTS, ADAPTATION, AND MITIGATION STRATEGIES
    Cairns, J. E.
    Sonder, K.
    Zaidi, P. H.
    Verhulst, N.
    Mahuku, G.
    Babu, R.
    Nair, S. K.
    Das, B.
    Govaerts, B.
    Vinayan, M. T.
    Rashid, Z.
    Noor, J. J.
    Devi, P.
    San Vicente, F.
    Prasanna, B. M.
    ADVANCES IN AGRONOMY, VOL 114, 2012, 114 : 1 - 58
  • [47] Governing Climate Change in China and Brazil: Mitigation Strategies
    Fabiana Barbi
    Journal of Chinese Political Science, 2016, 21 : 357 - 370
  • [48] Stakeholder pressures and corporate climate change mitigation strategies
    Cadez, Simon
    Czerny, Albert
    Letmathe, Peter
    BUSINESS STRATEGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2019, 28 (01) : 1 - 14
  • [49] Guest Editorial: Some Mitigation Strategies for Climate Change
    Xiao, Hong-Wei
    DRYING TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 33 (14) : 1679 - 1680
  • [50] Research advances in climate and environmental change impacts on inland fisheries of India: status, vulnerability and mitigation strategies
    Sarkar, U. K.
    Das, B. K.
    AQUATIC ECOSYSTEM HEALTH & MANAGEMENT, 2021, 24 (03) : 7 - 17