Climate Futures

Climate Futures, from the Centre for Science Education and the Comino Foundation, is a contemporary curriculum resource that focuses on unraveling the complexity of climate change and environmental issues for lower secondary and upper primary students (10-14 years old).

The resource comprises an introductory activity, which launches the series and provides opportunities for self review, and five main tasks relating to key areas of activity that contribute to climate change:

Titles in the series
The series includes:
* The Introductory activity
* Green biker, on transport
* Garbage guru, on waste
* Food for thought, on food
* Smart energy, on energy and electricity
* Addicted to energy, on energy and materialism

Features
Each Climate Futures activity follows an innovative format:
1. All of the activities are underpinned throughout by the development of personal capability skills promoting aspects of critical thinking, communication, self-belief, creativity and teamwork.
2. Dilemma activities provide students with problems to solve by posing quandaries. They are designed to promote discussion amongst students and to encourage them to think of creative solutions.
3. 'Making a difference' aims to focus students on how they can explore things further. It is a stimulus to further extended work and proactive involvement in engaging with the issues of climate change.
4. The review opportunity is based on a 'smart grid' where students can record their progress across a range of personal development skills.

The Climate Futures materials were developed by the Centre for Science Education at Sheffield Hallam University with funding from the Comino Foundation.

Resources

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Smart Energy

Through energy use, each UK home creates around six tonnes of carbon dioxide a year. Much of this is the result of electricity generation. In this activity, from the Centre for Science Education and the Comino Foundation, students look into the advantages and disadvantages of the Smart Meter – an innovative device...

Addicted to Energy *suitable for home teaching*

This activity, from the Centre for Science Education and the Comino Foundation, is set in the context of choosing a birthday gift. It encourages students to think about carbon footprints. Which goods and services cause the biggest carbon dioxide emissions? What choices can we make to minimise emissions? 



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