The students' worksheets include prompts and questions that guide them towards creating their policies.
This lesson helps develop problem-solving and critical thinking skills.
Additional Prerequisites
The handouts can be printed and used offline.
Remind students that their policies must be related to climate change mitigation or adaptation. The lesson Mitigation vs. Adaptation can be used to review these terms.
The ScienceDirect link in "Sources" does not work.
Differentiation
This activity can be extended by having students research their policies to determine if they have been implemented anywhere before and how successful it was or could potentially be.
Students can present their policies to the class and discuss the pros and cons of each policy. In the end, students could vote on the policies they think would be most successful.
If students are unsure where to start, have them think about what matters most to them in their community. Students can also use this Table of Solutions for ideas.
If students need a refresher on climate change consider using this article by NASA, this video by Crash Course, and this video by ClimateScience.
Scientist Notes
Teaching Tips
Standards
Resource Type and Format
About the Partner Provider
ClimateScience
ClimateScience inspires young talents to seek careers in fields where they contribute to climate solutions. By providing beautifully illustrated, understandable, science-based educational content for free for everyone, they are building the fundamentals for Climate Education.
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