Bringing these ideas into your classroom

Mitigation responses to climate change touch on many disciplines: earth science, biology, human health, engineering, technology, economics, and policy. There are many places in the curriculum into which these topics can be woven. Students can engage in projects that focus on their own communities or on international case studies. Topics can involve lifestyle changes, innovative solutions, emerging technology, or policy negotiations. Subject areas can include energy, transportation, food, agriculture, commerce, or land use.

A possible pedagogic technique is to have students take a quantitative approach to investigate the impact of potential solutions. For example, how many light bulbs would need to be changed to offset rising carbon emissions? Is it possible to plant enough trees to soak up excess CO2? (See activity Atmospheric Carbon: Can We Offset the Increase? ) Often the best way for students to learn about mitigation is to engage them in a problem-solving activity that allows them to investigate and discover answers for themselves.

Teaching materials from the CLEAN collection


Middle school


High school

  • There are several lesson plans that incorporate a renewable energy mapping tool from the National Renewable Energy Labs, called Renewable Energy Living Lab. These lessons evaluate the feasibility, cost, and environmental impacts of installing renewable energy, and they are a way to bring engineering and design into the subject.
  • Climate Action Simulation - This interactive role-playing simulation is conducted as a simulated emergency climate summit organized by the United Nations that convenes global stakeholders to establish a concrete plan that limits warming to Paris Agreement goals. This game is a fun format for large groups to explore climate change solutions and see what it would really take to address this global challenge.
  • Solving the Carbon Dioxide Problem - Students use information from Project Drawdown to learn about the sectors where climate solutions are being implemented to help slow down climate warming. Students construct a plan for using specific solutions to reduce and remove the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, and make a claim describing how their plan could work to keep global temperature change below 1.5 °C.
  • The Energy Lab is a simulator that allows students to meet projected energy demand while also minimizing atmospheric CO2.