Lund University, Centre for Sustainability Studies, Lund, Sweden.
PLoS One. 2019 Jul 18;14(7):e0218305. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0218305. eCollection 2019.
Despite an overwhelming scientific consensus that climate change poses severe risks to human and natural systems, many young Canadian adults do not view it as a major issue. We analyzed secondary science curricula in each province for their coverage of climate change according to six core topics: physical climate mechanisms ("It's climate"), observed increase in temperature ("It's warming"), anthropogenic causes of warming ("It's us"), scientific consensus ("Experts agree"), negative consequences associated with warming ("It's bad"), and the possibility for avoiding the worst effects ("We can fix it"). We found that learning objectives tend to focus on knowledge of the first three elements, with little or no emphasis on scientific consensus, climate change impacts, or ways to address the issue. The provinces of Saskatchewan and Ontario provide the most comprehensive standards for climate change education, while Nova Scotia and New Brunswick provide the least. We conducted interviews with individuals responsible for curriculum design in six different provinces to understand how curriculum documents are developed and whether political controversies influence the writing process. Interviewees described a process relying on input from professionals, institutions, and members of the public where curriculum developers made decisions independent of political concerns. In some cases, efforts to provide balance may have led to a focus on social controversy, contrary to overwhelming scientific consensus. Curriculum documents are the basis for teacher instruction and textbook content; aligning these documents with the best possible evidence can improve student learning and engage the next generation of Canadians on the critical issue of climate change.
尽管科学界普遍认为气候变化对人类和自然系统构成严重风险,但许多加拿大年轻成年人并不认为这是一个主要问题。我们根据六个核心主题分析了每个省的中学科学课程,以了解其气候变化的涵盖范围:物理气候机制(“这是气候”)、观测到的温度升高(“正在变暖”)、变暖的人为原因(“是我们”)、科学共识(“专家们同意”)、与变暖相关的负面后果(“这很糟糕”)以及避免最坏影响的可能性(“我们可以解决”)。我们发现,学习目标往往侧重于前三个要素的知识,几乎没有或没有强调科学共识、气候变化影响或解决问题的方法。萨斯喀彻温省和安大略省提供了最全面的气候变化教育标准,而新斯科舍省和新不伦瑞克省则提供的最少。我们对六个不同省份负责课程设计的个人进行了采访,以了解课程文件是如何制定的,以及政治争议是否会影响编写过程。受访者描述了一个依赖专业人士、机构和公众意见的过程,课程开发人员在决策时不考虑政治问题。在某些情况下,为了提供平衡,可能会导致对社会争议的关注,与压倒性的科学共识相悖。课程文件是教师教学和教科书内容的基础;使这些文件与尽可能最好的证据保持一致,可以提高学生的学习效果,并使下一代加拿大人参与到气候变化这一关键问题上。