Abstract
In an age where catastrophic damage from climate-related events circulates through social and print media, it is important to build communities of hope for our elementary students. Climate justice education is a vehicle for creating hope and building strong, resilient communities where students are empowered to act for themselves and their natural surroundings. Local phenomena can be leveraged to engage elementary students in civic responsibility and science and engineering practices, inspiring students to take action through proposing solutions to their community. We engage urban elementary students in a year-long place-based experiential learning centered on a student-driven local phenomenon. This project situates students as scientists collecting data and evidence to develop claims and argue from evidence regarding bird structures and their survival in built and green environments. Students create authentic relationships with nature, rectifying the unjust relationships from past practices that contribute to environmental degradation of local communities. Climate justice is served as students use their voices for themselves, for the environment, and for the future of the planet they will inhabit.
Supplemental Resources
Supplemental data for this article can be accessed online at https://doi.org/10.1080/00368148.2024.2315677.
Rubrics
Bird count form and research template
Online resource list
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Candace Penrod
Candace Penrod ([email protected]) is the science supervisor in Salt Lake City School District, Utah, and a graduate student at Utah State University in Logan, Utah.
Kris Kaly
Kris Kaly is a district science coach in the Salt Lake City School District.