https://www.redfordcenter.org/resources/redford-center-youth-stories-curriculum/
Redford Center Stories, The Redford Center
This series of 10 learning activities each take one 45min class period
Learn more about Teaching Climate Literacy and Energy Awareness»Grade Level
Regional Focus
Online Readiness
Topics
Climate Literacy
This Activity builds on the following concepts of Climate Literacy.
Click a topic below for supporting information, teaching ideas, and sample activities.
- Humans can take action
- Climate is complex
- Climate is variable
- Our understanding of climate
- Humans affect climate
- Climate change has consequences
Energy Literacy
This Activity builds on the following concepts of Energy Literacy.
Click a topic below for supporting information, teaching ideas, and sample activities.
Notes From Our Reviewers
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Teaching Tips | Science | Pedagogy |
Technical Details
Teaching Tips
- Many of the videos embedded in the teaching PowerPoints are lengthy and will need discretion by the teacher for time restraints.
- The Redford Center hosts "filmmaking challenges", which require reflection by students and is time intensive, as students write a story, create a video, animation, poem, poster, or other visual to show their learning.
- "Challenges" may be used together or as stand-alone lessons based on a topic of interest.
- Educators may consider replacing some examples in the lessons with examples that are more relevant to students. For example, instead of watching a video about clean energy in Arizona, consider finding a video about solar panels or renewable natural gas used in your local area.
About the Content
- The materials in this resource examine the relationship between communities and nature, with emphasis on the impacts of climate change, social-environmental justice, the disparity in access and equity outdoors, and meaningful, youth/community-inspired solutions.
- This is a series of ten lessons about the climate, environmental justice, and resilience/sustainability.
- There are misconceptions addressed throughout the lessons.
- The resource is funded by the Redford Center, which is a private organization created by the Redford family. There are some biases presented within the materials that reflect the Redford family's opinions, but overall the information is of good quality.
- These lessons have a focus on science communication. There is little focus on the mathematical basis for some concepts.
- Passed initial science review - expert science review pending.
About the Pedagogy
- Students write and tell critical stories that can inspire and impact local and global action for a more environmentally sustainable and socially just world and create models for systems thinking and creativity.
- Students are asked to meet a challenge by creating a vehicle of communication to show their learning on each topic. Writing prompts, conversation ideas, research ideas, and extension options are provided.
- Students engage in narrative and digital storytelling analysis and critical/creative thinking.
- The resource focuses on science communication, especially visual/auditory usually through videos and presentations. This may be intimidating for students who prefer written assignments, and educators will need to help scaffold.
- They will develop techniques for listening, interviewing, collecting data, film composition, purpose-driven storytelling, and more.
- Students will draw connections between social-environmental-economic patterns and inspire deeper self-reflection and confidence for learning across subjects.
- The teacher guide is comprehensive.