Empowering Youth for Climate Change Adaptation Action

In 2021, Learning for a Sustainable Future (LSF) received support to bring information about climate change and adaptation to educators and students across Canada through the Empowering Youth for Climate Change Adaptation Action project. A 2019 national Climate Change Education survey identified gaps in climate change knowledge and resources for educators and students. This finding was reinforced by LSF’s extensive engagement with Canadian educators. To support educators and help young people become better equipped to face climate change, LSF created online climate change Inquiry education guides entitled “Empowering Learners in a Warming World” (ELWW). These 3 guides provide teachers with age-appropriate resources and activities to educate students in Kindergarten through grade 12 about climate change. LSF also produced the Green Jobs: Adapting to our Changing Climate video series to inspire students to think about green jobs. This series of 10 videos introduces students to various Canadian experts who build climate resilience through their work. Each video is hosted by high school students from across Canada and interviews experts to explore how climate change is impacting different fields and how experts are advancing adaptation and building climate resilience. In the fall of 2022, LSF will be: distributing the Green Jobs video series to guidance departments and careers classes across Canada; supporting teachers to incorporate climate change learning through professional development based on Empowering Learners in a Warming World guides; expanding the reach of these resources through promotion (promotional videos for ELWW) social media and incorporating them into Youth Leadership forums.

The K-6 Empowering Learners in a Warming World guides and Green Jobs video series were supported by Natural Resources Canada’s Building Regional Adaptation Capacity and Expertise (BRACE).

Understanding and Assessing Impacts

Education is critical for responding to climate change at the regional, provincial/territorial, national, and international level. To promote education about climate change, educators and students need to be well-equipped with relevant and accurate knowledge and resources. However, conventional teaching, based on information transfer and finding the “right” answers, does not align well with the complexity of climate change or the evolving nature of the field. Students need to be engaged in active problem-solving because climate solutions are nuanced and specific to regional realities.

The ELWW guides are intended to begin by providing a high-level overview of climate change, why we should care, and how it affects our world. The content also focuses on Canadian policy, carbon emissions, and national level changes to temperature, precipitation, the cryosphere, freshwater, and biodiversity. The grade 7-12 ELWW guide dives deeper into climate science, covering climate models and the Climate Atlas of Canada. There are several exercises where students investigate climate modelling and climate impacts in their local region based on various emissions pathways and time periods (historical or future). The inquiry also covers Indigenous perspectives and knowledge on climate change, how climate change affects health, and the ethical implications of climate change.

In the Green Jobs video series, professionals discuss the intersection between climate change impacts, their job, and how they work to build resilience and adapt to current and projected impacts. Video topics include traditional Indigenous knowledge, water, nature-based solutions, community health, land use planning, agriculture, tourism, infrastructure, and natural resources. Professionals make strong connections between how climate change is impacting Canadian communities, environment, health, economy, livelihoods etc. and why adaptation is needed.

For additional climate information, look at the Resources section of this example (below).

Identifying Actions

Implementation

Outcomes and Monitoring Progress

Next Steps

Resources