Eight miles separate USC鈥檚 main campus from the Santa Monica mountain range north of Los Angeles. On a good day, you can see those mountains from campus. On a bad day, those mountains鈥攁nd even the skyscrapers of downtown L.A.鈥攁re more of an idea; object permanence reassures us these places still exist within the smog, but you鈥檇 have to take someone鈥檚 word for it if you didn鈥檛 know.
That smog is a daily reminder of the toll humans have on the Earth, a subtler and more consistent sign than the more-extreme events that suggest fallout from climate change: flooding in Houston; more-powerful hurricanes in the American South; wildfires that ravage California and Australia.
In September, the United Nations鈥 Michelle Bachelet declared climate change : 鈥淭his is not a situation where any country, any institution, any policymaker can stand on the sidelines,鈥 said the high commissioner for human rights. 鈥淭he economies of all nations; the institutional, political, social and cultural fabric of every state; and the rights of all your people鈥攁nd future generations鈥攚ill be impacted.鈥
Experts say that climate change has the by making existing inequalities worse and causing civic instability. It is against this backdrop that the youth-orchestrated climate-strike movement has boomed, in which hundreds of thousands of students worldwide have walked out of school .
Those strikes and an abundance of other evidence suggest that both K鈥12 and higher education systems are for a better climate education. And if so鈥攊f our educational institutions are unable to meaningfully address the greatest threat to our democracy and to human rights鈥攖hen what does that say about the of our educational system?
鈥淪chools and school districts ought to ask themselves, 鈥楾o what extent can we actually be responsive to the needs of our students given where the world is today?鈥欌 says Charles H.F. Davis III, an assistant professor of clinical education at the 海角论坛 School of Education. 鈥淭here鈥檚 something to be said for whether, despite its democratic aspirations of developing and forming people who participate and engage in society, [our education system] has consistently gotten away from the things that improve the material conditions of everyday people and society as a whole.鈥
THE STAKES
Current worldwide goals鈥攕et by the in 2016鈥攁re to keep global average temperature from rising 2 degrees Celsius above levels predating the Industrial Revolution. The accord has an even stronger goal of preventing the global average from rising 1.5 degrees Celsius. Scientists estimate we are already at 1 degree Celsius above the preindustrial average.
The 2-degree mark is considered to be the point of major, likely irreversible damage鈥攖he death of coral reefs; ice-free Arctic summers. But hitting the 1.5-degree number would also bring consequences, scientists say, such as , which would release tons of trapped methane, further warming the planet.
includes warming and acidifying oceans; more-extreme weather events such as flooding and heatwaves; ; and sea-level rise. Already, the pressure is felt in places like the Marshall Islands, where President Hilda Heine EdD 鈥04 has been vigorously advocating for climate-change reform.
We have data on the culprits: The are China (29 percent), the United States (14 percent), the European Union (10 percent) and India (7 percent). Of those, the U.S. has the highest emissions per capita.
The are electricity, transportation, manufacturing and agriculture. In October, the Climate Accountability Institute released a for 35 percent of the world鈥檚 carbon emissions since 1965; 12 are foreign-state-owned energy companies, while the remainder include names familiar to most Americans, such as Chevron, ExxonMobil, BP and Shell.
If educational institutions are unable to meaningfully address the greatest threat to our democracy and to human rights, then what does that say about the purpose and priorities of our educational system?
How much students learn about climate change depends on their state鈥檚 curricular standards; whether their teachers have adequate preparation, materials, desire and political cover to effectively teach it; and what resources educational institutions are willing to invest in creating learning opportunities.
Given what we know about climate change, it would be unfair to lay the responsibility for fixing it solely at the feet of an education system that is chronically underfunded, ignored and overburdened. But polls show that many adults ; research suggests that climate science education may be ; and most of all, as evidenced by the on Nov. 1, students want it.
鈥淲e need a moonshot,鈥 says Gale Sinatra, an expert on science education and the Stephen H. Crocker Professor of Education at 海角论坛. 鈥淲e need the Sputnik of climate change education.鈥
HOW STUDENTS EXPERIENCE CLIMATE CHANGE
The most extreme long-run effects of climate change will hit everyone, but low-income communities and, especially, students of color are already disproportionately feeling the effects.
Indeed, experts say the movements for equity and for action on climate change need each other.
鈥淲e live in a society that tries to compartmentalize a lot of these things, rather than recognize the ways in which they鈥檙e overlapping and intersecting,鈥 Davis says.
For example: Portland, Ore., has long claimed a leadership role in environmentalism. The city was one of the first to ; it has plans to ; and in 2016, its school district agreed to after a petition from students and teachers.
But the benefits of climate action have not been felt equitably in Portland. Writing for Fast Company in November, Alisa Kane, the climate action manager for the city鈥檚 Bureau of Planning and Sustainability, noted how has left behind children of color.
鈥淒ecades of institutional racism and gentrification pushed Black, Indigenous, Asian and Latinx communities from Portland鈥檚 central city to its outer neighborhoods,鈥 Kane writes. 鈥淲hat was waiting for them there? Poor transit options, a deficit of trees and parks and inequitable investments in infrastructure. These areas are also further from job centers, leading to longer commute times and distances and increased transportation costs.鈥
These differences are common in cities and lead to disparities in opportunities but also in health. Black and Hispanic people are the most likely demographic groups to (think Los Angeles鈥 Interstate 10), which research shows exposes them to poor air quality, increasing the likelihood of asthma. Food insecurity , meaning that the kind of price shocks that affects food鈥攕ay, after a natural disaster鈥攚ould .
鈥淲e can鈥檛 make the environment separate from people, and we can鈥檛 separate people from the environment,鈥 Davis says. 鈥淎nd if that鈥檚 the case, we have to ask which people are most likely to be affected by what鈥檚 happening.鈥

BETWEEN A HOT ROCK AND A HARD PLACE
Each state has its own standards for what children should know by the time they graduate from high school. Last decade, a coalition of teachers, researchers and education nonprofits produced the , an initiative meant to unify science standards across the U.S. Twenty states and the District of Columbia have adopted NGSS, while many other states have adopted similar standards.
Yet English and Math classes overshadow science classes in terms of instructional time, Sinatra says, and being able to learn climate science obviously presupposes that students have learned science generally. But a 2016 report by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine found that under NGSS.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like if you鈥檝e never even jogged before,鈥 Sinatra says, 鈥渁nd now you鈥檙e going to run the Boston Marathon?鈥
NGSS does include climate science elements, but the varies wildly between schools and even between classrooms. Environmental literacy is not otherwise mandated in most states; to do so in 2011.
And political differences ; for example, a January review by The New York Times found a in Texas textbooks than California texts.
鈥淭here鈥檚 something to be said for whether, despite its democratic aspirations of developing and forming people who participate and engage in society, [our education system] has consistently gotten away from the things that improve the material conditions of everyday
people and society as a whole.鈥
鈥敽=锹厶 Assistant Professor of Clinical Education Charles H.F. Davis III
鈥淲e know that what鈥檚 actually implemented in classrooms often varies considerably from what鈥檚 in the standards,鈥 says Morgan Polikoff, an associate professor of education at 海角论坛 and an expert on standards and curriculum. 鈥淭he question is, if this is an important priority鈥攁nd by all accounts it should be鈥攚hat specific content and strategies are being implemented at the school to ensure that students are learning about climate change and what they can do to combat it?鈥
Remember how those students in Portland petitioned for a better climate change curriculum? In March 2019, because the district hadn鈥檛 implemented what it said it would. A science teacher told The New York Times that he had sent a letter of concern to the superintendent, relaying that he had been told by the district that 鈥溾榩eripheral鈥 work like climate justice education would need to be put on hold.鈥
Indeed, the climate-strike movement of 2019 unearthed similar apathy across the country, as districts charged protesting students with unexcused absences and told them that 鈥渢here just isn鈥檛 time鈥 to address interest in climate change.
鈥淥f course literacy and numeracy are important,鈥 Davis says, 鈥渂ut it shouldn鈥檛 have to be an either/or conversation. 鈥 This is a system not acknowledging its role and responsibility.鈥
TEACHER BARRIERS
It鈥檚 not that most teachers are uninterested in climate justice. The California Federation of Teachers (CFT), for instance, claims to be the first statewide labor organization to have adopted a , in 2016. CFT followed up on that agenda by offering a climate justice toolkit for teaching and by pushing for the state鈥檚 teacher pension fund .
In fact, three out of four teachers agree that , per an August survey by National Public Radio. Yet in the same survey only 4 in 10 teachers say they teach climate change. (Only 45 percent of parents talk to their children about it.)
By an overwhelming margin, surveyed teachers who don鈥檛 teach climate change say it鈥檚 because it鈥檚 not their subject area. This may be a reflection of a broader viewpoint within district leadership that sees climate science education as incompatible with the many things schools are already asked to do.
In their book Teaching Climate Change to Adolescents: Reading, Writing, and Making a Difference, authors and professors Richard Beach, Jeff Share and Allen Webb write that school districts need to understand that state standards aren鈥檛 so confining: 鈥淎 purely science-oriented approach to climate change can miss the social, historical, ethical and human realities that are critical to the problem.鈥
But it鈥檚 one thing to write that, and it鈥檚 another thing for an interested teacher to have the resources and knowledge, much less feel supported, to tackle climate change in a non-
science classroom.
Viet Nguyen MAT 鈥11 has been a teacher of science and engineering for 11 years. Although he can point to a proactive history of bringing climate change into the classroom, he says the level of similar concern among colleagues varies widely, with some teachers worried about re-credentialing or having time to learn new curricula.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e doing a free workshop on a Saturday,鈥 Nguyen says, 鈥測ou have to really be into your stuff.鈥
Nguyen adds that students are not so monolithic in their activism, which means that teachers need to lead on climate science education.
鈥淚 bring it up more than they do,鈥 he says.
HIGHER EDUCATION
When she took over as USC鈥檚 12th president, Carol Folt galvanized an institution that by many objective measures has lagged behind its peers for years on sustainability measures.
In her few months leading the university, Folt has made climate change one of . Early actions included reinstating a discount on bus and rail passes for USC employees, planning the installation of solar panels at the Galen Center and USC Wrigley Marine Science Center, and to guide the university鈥檚 future sustainability efforts. (Sinatra is a member.)
鈥淭he culture at USC is changing,鈥 says Claire Mauss 鈥20, an environmental sciences and health major and co-executive director of USC鈥檚 Environmental Student Assembly (ESA). 鈥淭here鈥檚 been a lot of student traction for a long time, and it wasn鈥檛 until we got this new administration that we鈥檝e actually been able to do anything.鈥

Mauss says the ESA has been working on a project that would establish mandated training for incoming freshmen around sustainability and climate change, the way students already must learn about alcohol consumption. At the university level, the provost鈥檚 office is exploring how to improve climate change education.
Experts say that a key component of climate change education is having institutions examine their own practices; schools can鈥檛 expect to teach students about climate change and escape culpability for their own roles in accelerating it.
鈥淭he more you learn about the climate and what it鈥檚 doing to society, the more you want to do something about it,鈥 says Victoria Petryshyn, an assistant professor of environmental studies at USC and teacher of a history class focused on climate change. 鈥淭he generation ahead of our students has seen this problem and not done anything. At least you want to see that your university is doing something about it, because then you don鈥檛 feel like you were part of the problem.鈥
We need the Sputnik of climate change education.
鈥敽=锹厶 Stephen H. Crocker Professor of Education Gale Sinatra
According to Julian Dautremont, director of programs for the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education, there are three places where colleges and universities can see the most impact in fighting climate change: responsible endowment investment, responsible procurement and revisiting graduation requirements.
Reallocating endowment funds away from the fossil fuel industry has long met resistance. The National Association of College and University Business Officers reports that 600鈥700 institutions where 2鈥7 percent of funds are invested in 鈥渆nergy and natural resources.鈥
As covered by The Chronicle of Higher Education, universities haven鈥檛 been as responsive to , as investments in renewable energy are now showing more long-term promise than fossil fuels. More than three-dozen colleges and universities鈥攑rimarily in left-leaning states鈥攈ave withdrawn or .
Student protests have been more effective in bringing transparency; in February, for example, pressure from a coalition of student environmental groups such as Mauss鈥 successfully pressed USC to divulge that .

In addition to finances, colleges and universities have to be willing to ask a host of questions about how committed they are to fighting climate change: How sustainable are the school鈥檚 suppliers? How might meat consumption be reduced on campus? What barriers exist to creating more climate change classes? Should a climate change course or service-learning component be a graduation requirement? Do efforts address the racial and gendered components of climate change? Is the school acting as a good partner for the community in which it exists?
鈥淭his is an unprecedented amount of change,鈥 Mauss says. 鈥淯niversities are working against a system not designed to do this.鈥
But, she says鈥攊n a positive sign that awareness and activism are spreading鈥攊ncoming classes are showing excitement about addressing the issue.
鈥淥ur first meeting this year had 250 attendees,鈥 Mauss says. 鈥淲e had freshmen emailing us over the summer asking how to get involved. The more I see youth want to get involved with this, the more hopeful I become.鈥
That鈥檚 the kind of progress necessary to help fix such a large, multifaceted problem. Sinatra, the 海角论坛 professor, says climate anxiety is merited, but the minimum that educational institutions can do is signal urgency instead of fatalism.
鈥淚f you tell people we鈥檙e screwed and that there鈥檚 nothing you can do, then they don鈥檛 want to do anything,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd if nobody does anything, then we are screwed.鈥