<p>"This packed paperback will bring you up to date and refortify the civic stamina that is required to save the planet for your posterity." </p>
<p>—<strong>Ralph Nader</strong>, consumer advocate, lawyer, and author</p>

<p>“Social studies scholars and educators have advocated for making a case that environmental issues are social studies issues, not just the purview of natural science education. This book is an important piece toward responding to this call. The (book’s Climate Denial Inquiry Model (CDIM)) is a powerful tool for educators to frame and integrate climate change education into literacy and social studies education.”</p>
<p>—<strong>Teachers College Record</strong></p>

"This packed paperback will bring you up to date and refortify the civic stamina that is required to save the planet for your posterity." —Ralph Nader, consumer advocate, lawyer, and author Climate change and climate denial have remained largely off the radar in literacy and social studies education. This book addresses that gap with the design of the Climate Denial Inquiry Model (CDIM) and clear examples of how educators and students can confront two forms of climate denial: science denial and action denial. The CDIM highlights how critical literacies specifically designed for climate denial texts can be used alongside eco-civic practices of deliberation, reflexivity, and counter-narration to help students discern corporate, financial, and politically motivated roots of climate denial and to better understand efforts to misinform the American public, sow doubt and distrust of basic scientific knowledge, and erode support for evidence-based policymaking and collective civic action. With an emphasis on inquiry-based teaching and learning, the book also charts a path from destructive stories-we-live-by that are steeped in climate denial (humans are separate from nature, the primary goal of society is economic growth without limits, nature is a resource to be used and exploited) to ecojustice stories-To-live by that invite teachers and students to consider more just and sustainable futures. Book Features: An innovative model to help educators address climate science denial and climate action denial.Clear examples of how to integrate critical literacies designed specifically for climate denial.Concrete climate- and inquiry-based teaching and learning pathways in literacy and social studies with much potential for connections across other content areas. A path from destructive stories steeped in climate denial to more just and sustainable futures.
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Climate change and climate denial have remained largely off the radar in literacy and social studies education. This book addresses that gap with the design of the Climate Denial Inquiry Model and clear examples of how educators and students can confront two forms of climate denial: science denial and action denial.
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“Fascinating! Instead of ignoring climate denial in the hope that it will go away, the authors grapple with it directly in the hope that it will provide a way for young minds to understand the power dynamics at work in our society.” —Bill McKibben, author, educator, and environmentalist
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780807767207
Publisert
2022-09-23
Utgiver
Vendor
Teachers' College Press
Vekt
249 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Dybde
9 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
176

Series edited by

Om bidragsyterne

James S. Damico is a professor of literacy, culture, and language education at Indiana University, Bloomington and a former elementary and middle school teacher from New Jersey. Mark C. Baildon is an associate professor in foundations of education at the United Arab Emirates University and a former middle and high school social studies teacher in schools around the world (United States, Israel, Singapore, Saudi Arabia, and Taiwan).