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Climate

Climate Curriculum for Teachers

Your Climate, Your Future
An interdisciplinary approach to incorporating climate change in your classroom


© WWF

The WWF Climate Change Team has developed a comprehensive educational curriculum that will elevate students' knowledge of the issue and spur dialogue about what each of us can do to make a difference.

The high school-level curriculum is divided into fifteen lessons which include handouts, a glossary of terms and additional resources for ongoing discussions and research. Please feel free to use the lessons you believe your students will most benefit from.

Contact Us to receive a complimentary printed copy of the curriculum!

Curriculum can only be shipped within the U.S. We are sorry to our international teachers, but funding does not allow for international shipping.

Introduction

Section A: Introducing Climate Change

  • Lesson 1: Climate Change Pretest
    Discipline: Natural Sciences
    A quick 10-question quiz to test students' current knowledge of climate change so the teacher can determine how much class time is needed for background material on climate change.
  • Lesson 2: Our Unique Atmosphere
    Discipline: Natural Sciences
    Read and discuss articles on the atmosphere to understand how heat-trapping gases work in the atmosphere and why they and carbon dioxide are necessary for life on Earth.
  • Lesson 3: Emissions of Heat-trapping Gases
    Discipline: Natural Sciences
    Record how much energy they use at home to calculate their own carbon footprint. Students learn about atmospheric concentrations of heat-trapping gases and make predictions while identifying the sources of emissions.

Section B: Climate Change and Us

  • Lesson 4: Communities of Living Things
    Discipline: Natural Sciences, Social Sciences, English and Humanities
    Read and discuss articles on how changing weather patterns, a changing balance of competitors,and changes in the availability of food and shelter can increase uncertainty for communities of living things. Students predict how continued warming may affect communities of living things with which they are familiar.
  • Lesson 5: Climate Change and People
    Discipline: Social Sciences, English and Humanities
    Read and discuss real news articles on the social impacts of climate change, and how impacts on the economy and habitat will affect people. In groups, students determine the top-five risks for humans and present to the class.
  • Lesson 6: Climate Change in My City
    Discipline: Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
    Analyze climate change at local, regional, and global scales using an historical climate index.
  • Lesson 7: Climate Change and Disease
    Discipline: Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
    Research the relationship between hosts, parasites, and vectors for common vector-borne diseases and evaluate how climate change could affect the spread of disease. Students explore how social factors affect the occurrence and spread of disease.
  • Lesson 8: Climate Change and Ecosystems
    Discipline: Natural Sciences
    Research the interdependencies among plants and animals in an ecosystem and explore how climate change might affect those interdependencies and the ecosystem as a whole.
  • Lesson 9: The Forecaster
    Discipline: Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
    Gather historical climate data for local regions and chart the trends over the past 100 years. Make climate predictions for the next month, semester, and year, and monitor these predictions over that period of time.
  • Lesson 10: Car Quest
    Discipline: Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
    Assess the environmental impacts of a fleet of cars and then research and prepare a report about greener transportation choices.

Section C: What We Can Do!

  • Lesson 11: Energy Watch
    Discipline: Natural Sciences, Social Sciences
    Keep track of home-energy usage and develop a plan to reduce the home-energy consumption. Track the progress over a period of time, and present the results to the class.
  • Lesson 12: Write On!
    Discipline: Social Sciences, English and Humanities
    Express views and knowledge of climate change in the community by writing federal political officials, local political officials, and regional newspapers, giving students a voice on climate change and their concerns for their futures and the future of their community.
  • Lesson 13: The Stabilization Wedges Game
    Discipline: Natural Sciences
    Learn about the technologies currently available that can substantially cut carbon emissions, develop critical reasoning skills as they create their own portfolio of strategies to cut emissions, and verbally communicate the rationale for their selections. Working in teams, students develop the skills to negotiate a solution that is physically plausible and politically acceptable, and defend their solution to a larger group.
  • Lesson 14: The Great Climate Change Debate
    Discipline: Social Sciences, English and Humanities
    Develop arguments and positions to debate ways to address climate change politically, environmentally, and economically on the regional, national and international level.
  • Lesson 15: Climate Witness Oral History Project
    Discipline: Social Sciences, English and Humanities
    Interview elder community members and write their stories of how they have noticed the climate changing over the years. Present these stories in class, offer suggestions to students, discuss relevance of material presented, and publish stories on a Web site.

Additional Resources

Download all 15 Lesson Plans of the Climate Curriculum (28MB PDF)

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WWF Experts

Richard Moss

Vice President and Managing Director for Climate Change

“Climate change and what we do about it is going to transform the world much more rapidly than people realize. It’s my goal to get us moving to a world we will want, not one we’ll regret leaving for our children and grandchildren.”

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Van Beacham is a professional fly fishing guide and lives in northern New Mexico.  Van has been fishing since he was 6 years old. Over the years he has witnessed many of the effects that warmer temperatures are having on the river systems and the fish that depend on them.
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