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'Don't Take Our Voices Away' A role play on the Indigenous Peoples' Global Summit on Climate Change
https://www.zinnedproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/dont_take_our_voices_away.pdf

Julie Treick O'Neill, Tim Swinehart, Zinn Education Project

This resource has students role-play an Indigenous climate summit. It includes handouts about each Indigenous group and their concerns about climate change.

This learning activity takes three 45min class periods

Learn more about Teaching Climate Literacy and Energy Awareness»


Notes From Our Reviewers The CLEAN collection is hand-picked and rigorously reviewed for scientific accuracy and classroom effectiveness. Read what our review team had to say about this resource below or learn more about how CLEAN reviews teaching materials
Teaching Tips | Science | Pedagogy | Technical Details

Teaching Tips

  • Teachers may want to lead a land acknowledgment for the Indigenous peoples whose unceded land they are on. They can look this up at https://native-land.ca
  • Care should be taken to set ground rules so that racist stereotypes are not reinforced (for ex, students should not speak with accents).
  • The link provided goes to an article that describes the purpose of the lesson and how the lesson went in practice. Teachers may need to read this more than once and take notes on what the steps of the lesson are.
  • This lesson touches on climate change concepts like ocean acidification but doesn't go into detail. To expand this lesson, students could do additional research to more deeply understand the climate impacts mentioned in their handout.
  • Teachers may want to adapt this activity to address the current COP (which happens annually) by watching some of the proceedings and reading articles related to COP events and decision-making.
  • The activity could be appropriate for upper middle school (7th-8th) with some modifications.

About the Content

  • This resource teaches students about climate change impacts from the perspectives of six Indigenous communities around the world.
  • Students read the actual report Indigenous Peoples made called the Anchorage Declaration from the Indigenous Peoples' Global Summit on Climate Change to reflect on similarities and differences to their own decisions in the role play.
  • Only a few references were cited, so students could extend the activity by looking up the reference sources.
  • Passed initial science review - expert science review pending.

About the Pedagogy

  • Students are split into groups representing Indigenous communities where they learn about specific issues affecting these communities. They then discuss action items they would like to bring to the UN Climate Summit (aka Conference of Parties/COP), role-playing as representatives from their community.
  • An understanding of climate change and how it impacts people would be a helpful prerequisite.
  • There is not a teacher's guide, but examples show how it was used in a history classroom.
  • It is recommended that the educator read through the paper and take notes in lieu of a comprehensive lesson plan available.
  • Teachers will need to look up the action items from the Indigenous Climate Summit on which this activity is based for the homework component on p. 6 where students compare their outcomes to the real summit.

Technical Details/Ease of Use

  • Teachers may want to print the handouts for students included at the end of the article.

Related URLs These related sites were noted by our reviewers but have not been reviewed by CLEAN

A mapping activity related to land acknowledgements can be found here: https://native-land.ca/wp/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/teacher_guide_2019_final.pdf
Entered the Collection: March 2023 Last Reviewed: June 2022

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