Empowering Secondary Education Teachers for Sustainable Climate Action
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
- The primary participants must be middle and high school teachers.
- The documents must focus on CCE.
- The results must be related to the comprehension of CC and educational interventions.
- Only articles are considered for inclusion.
- Documents must be written in English, Spanish, or Portuguese.
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. Teachers’ Understanding and Perspectives of Climate Change
4.2. Teaching Climate Change in Secondary Education
- Fostering responsible and informed decision-making.
- Grasping the boundaries of science and the dynamic process of constructing scientific knowledge, grounding in evidence, and responsive to environmental and social challenges.
- Cultivating critical awareness of social inequality and injustice.
- Acknowledging the existence of intricate, global-local relationships.
- Establishing connections between science and everyday life.
- Nurturing the ability to discuss and negotiate in pursuit of solutions to complex and contentious socioscientific.
- Developing civic competence.
4.3. Climate Change as an Educational Issue
5. Conclusions
5.1. Challenges in Promoting Sustainable Climate Action in Secondary Education
5.2. Opportunities to Promote Sustainable Climate Action in Secondary Education
Supplementary Materials
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Year | Teacher’s Specialization | Educational Level | Topic (Based on the Aims and Research Questions Stated by the Authors) |
---|---|---|---|---|
[20] | 2022 | Geography teachers | Secondary School | Integration of CCE in classroom lessons |
[21] | 2022 | Miscellaneous | High School * | Teachers’ perceptions about CC |
[22] | 2022 | Marine science | High School | Influence of personal beliefs teaching CC and the impact of political controversy on CC instruction |
[23] | 2022 | Miscellaneous | High School | Teachers’ viewpoints on CC and their willingness to include CC concerns in classes |
[24] | 2022 | Miscellaneous | Secondary School | Teachers’ climate science literacy and its influence on expressed training needs. |
[25] | 2022 | science teachers | High School | Teaching CC and the implementation of epistemic activities for practice-oriented science instruction |
[26] | 2022 | science teachers | Secondary School | Teachers’ implementation of climate-focused curricular interventions |
[27] | 2021 | Miscellaneous | Secondary School * | Views of teachers about CCE in the curriculum |
[28] | 2021 | Marine science | High School | Teacher beliefs about CC |
[29] | 2021 | Miscellaneous | High School | Emotions in teaching about CC and their handling/coaching of emotional reactions in the classroom |
[30] | 2021 | Science teachers | Middle School | Perceptions of CC barriers and understanding of CC |
[31] | 2021 | Science teachers | Secondary School | CC perceptions of secondary science teachers |
[32] | 2020 | Miscellaneous | Lower Secondary | Teachers view CC at present and in the future and the practices that can be inserted into the school context |
[33] | 2020 | Miscellaneous | Senior Secondary | Awareness of CC and willingness to adopt pro-environmental behavior |
[34] | 2020 | Science teachers | Middle and High Schools | Time spent on CC in the classroom, use of a consensus-informed approach, and state-level curriculum standards |
[35] | 2020 | Miscellaneous | Middle School | Teachers practices and emotions |
[36] | 2020 | Agriculture teachers | Secondary Education | Teachers’ knowledge, the choice of their practices, and their beliefs about GCC |
[37] | 2019 | Science educators | Miscellaneous | Cultural values, worldviews, and support for the topic |
[38] | 2019 | Science teachers | Secondary School * | Arguments in favor of and against CC denial theories |
[39] | 2018 | Science teachers | Middle and High Schools | Teaching practices (time, emphasis, debates), content knowledge, and ideology regarding CC |
[40] | 2018 | Miscellaneous | Secondary School | Gaps and differences between risk and perceived risk and effective and sustainable adaptation strategies. |
[41] | 2018 | Geography teachers | Lower Secondary | Teachers’ beliefs and classroom practices when teaching weather formation and CC |
[42] | 2017 | Miscellaneous | Lower Secondary | Knowledge, attitudes, and practices towards CCE |
[43] | 2017 | Geography teachers | High School | CC science literacy (processes and causes of CC, CC impacts, CC responses) |
[44] | 2017 | Science teachers | Middle School | Teachers’ experiences and motivations in teaching CC |
[45] | 2017 | Miscellaneous | Secondary School | Goals, knowledge, competencies, and values about CCE |
[46] | 2017 | Miscellaneous | Secondary School | Perceptions of risk education |
[47] | 2017 | Science teachers | Secondary School | CCE experiences, understanding of CC consensus and controversy, and specific practices |
[48] | 2016 | Geography teachers | Lower Secondary | Emotions about the consequences of CC, strategies for coping with emotions, and views on CC mitigation |
[49] | 2016 | Science teachers | Middle and High Schools | Aspects of teaching CC, knowledge, and beliefs |
[50] | 2016 | Science teachers | Middle School * | Politically driven CC beliefs |
[51] | 2015 | Miscellaneous | Secondary School * | Personal and professional beliefs about CC and CCE |
[52] | 2015 | Science teachers | Secondary School | CC science knowledge |
[53] | 2015 | Science teachers | Secondary School * | Social negotiation in the advancement of CCE (attitudes, opinions, and experiences) |
[54] | 2015 | Geography teachers | High School | Literacy regarding CC science |
[55] | 2015 | Geography teachers | Secondary School | Understandings of CCE |
[56] | 2014 | Miscellaneous | Secondary School | CC topics included across disciplines, views of CC in the curriculum, and barriers and opportunities |
[57] | 2013 | Science teachers | Secondary School | Willing to convey CC information, ability to address controversial topics, beliefs in policy, and economic |
[58] | 2013 | Science teachers | Secondary School * | Background knowledge, need for cognition, need for closure, topic emotions, and plausibility perceptions |
[59] | 2010 | Science teachers | Middle and High Schools | Views and practices of CC as controversial topics: Motivations and barriers |
[60] | 2002 | Science teachers | Middle School | CC in the British science curriculum |
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García-Vinuesa, A. Empowering Secondary Education Teachers for Sustainable Climate Action. Sustainability 2024, 16, 7941. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16187941
García-Vinuesa A. Empowering Secondary Education Teachers for Sustainable Climate Action. Sustainability. 2024; 16(18):7941. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16187941
Chicago/Turabian StyleGarcía-Vinuesa, Antonio. 2024. "Empowering Secondary Education Teachers for Sustainable Climate Action" Sustainability 16, no. 18: 7941. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16187941
APA StyleGarcía-Vinuesa, A. (2024). Empowering Secondary Education Teachers for Sustainable Climate Action. Sustainability, 16(18), 7941. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16187941