Teach The Future’s Tracked Changes

Our pupils are faced with the senseless, existential threat that is climate breakdown right now.  This decade is our make-or-break opportunity to limit warming to 1.5°C and steer the world toward a net-zero future; as educators, we play a vital role in helping to create a better, greener world.

www.teachthefuture.uk 

We can reach all pupils and tackle the issue holistically by ensuring that the teaching of the climate crisis, living sustainably, and connecting with our natural environment is at the heart of everything we teach.

This is where Teach The Future’s Tracked Changes review is so incredibly useful. Their researched documentation shows what a new curriculum for England could look like by suggesting where and how the national curriculum can be amended to include sustainability and climate education, providing guidance on how to engage with the climate crisis so that young people feel empowered to participate in tackling it, rather than feeling hopeless and scared.

As a school, we have included more explicit links to these issues within lessons. In English, for example, exploring Greta Thunberg’s use pf persuasion within her many speeches, and opting to teach the fantastic novel The Survival Game by Nicky Singer, which follows a climate migrant's journey to Scotland.

nickysinger.com/new/the-survival-game/



In Food Technology, pupils learn about ways to prevent food waste and explore food provenance, foods grown in UK, organic farming, methods of production, and alternative protein sources.

For every project in DT, classes discuss what materials to use, with a review of the environmental impact of these materials - environmental sustainability is a big part of DT theory. Year 7's particularly focus on using acrylic in their lessons, and so there is a heavy focus on the impact of plastic on the environment.


In Modern Foreign Languages, teachers discuss the global impact of international sports events, and in French, look at the production chain - where raw materials are sourced, where manufactured, where sold, where re-used. Students are always amazed that cotton is a plant! In year 11 Spanish vocab and expressions encourages students to give opinions about the worst world problems and possible solutions, including describing what one must do to be more environmentally friendly.

I very much see the embedding of sustainability as an enriching and cohesive tool that unites many aspects of school life, with a focus on student mental health and well-being, by identifying crisis situations, giving pupils the tools to cope, plus empowering pupils with the knowledge and skills to instigate change.  As an adult, I know how overwhelming it can feel to worry about climate breakdown, and it distresses me to know that our pupils feel this burden.

Teach The Future’s overall Tracked Changes Review highlights that “The curriculum is already interconnected. This holistic view has enabled us to integrate climate change and the ecological crisis more coherently across the curriculum as a wealth of transdisciplinary connections became apparent.” It’s win-win – and there’s no time to lose.

Tracked Changed Review


Thank you, Teach The Future, for tirelessly working to ensure students are substantively taught about the climate emergency and ecological crisis, and for providing much needed and useful resources to help us on our way.


Sarah Dukes is Sustainability Coordinator and English Teacher at The Chase School in Malvern; she passionately feels we must adapt our school curriculum to include explicit teaching on the climate crisis, sustainability, and nature connectedness.  Follow @ecodukes

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