This thirteen-minute TED talk provides historical context and rationale for the global fossil fuel treaty.
The speaker explains the need for a framework to constrain the production of fossil fuels, highlighting their Canadian government's ineffective approach.
Topics that are touched upon in the talk include distorted markets, climate delusion, the world's capability for change, and government regulation.
The speaker worked diligently to identify a climate problem yet remains focused on solutions to that problem.
The emphasis on the idea that the world can change quickly can be helpful for any students who may experience climate despair.
Prerequisites
It may help students to have a basic understanding of how governments can regulate industries aa well as how economic markets function.
Differentiation & Implementation
There are many opportunities to differentiate instruction using this video depending on how you design and structure the learning activities that surround it. Here are just a few ideas:
Activate Engagement: Pose a question/scenario to the students ~ Think of an instance where the adults in a school district believed that a school-related issue was being handled well, but the youth knew or believed otherwise. Have a few students share out, then draw the parallel example of how many in the public believe that world governments are effectively regulating fossil fuel industries but those who are closely involved know otherwise.
Student Design Opportunities: The notion that economic markets would constrain fossil fuel supply has proven to be very weak. Allow students to watch this video with a focus on distorted markets. Challenge them to design an improved model to ensure that fossil fuel drawdowns would actually occur.
Robust Scientific Literacy Accompaniment: The IPCC chapter on mitigation pathways to reach the 1.5 degree temperature goal is dense but informative. Pieces of this would be excellent to break down with an advanced class.
Scientist Notes
Teaching Tips
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Resource Type and Format
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All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.