Access to Climate Education is a Matter of Justice

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By Alexia Leclercq, co-founder of Start: Empowerment

In his poem The Right to Dream (1995), Uruguayan writer Eduardo Galeano starts with “Who knows how the world will be in 2025!” and goes on to imagine a better future. Unfortunately, 2025 is coming up, and with each year passing our survival is at stake. This year alone, millions of people worldwide experienced extreme climate events, groundbreaking temperatures, genocides, and deadly exposure to toxic chemicals and pollution leading to mass death, injury, displacement, poverty, and trauma. Why have our education systems not caught up with this crisis?

Schools continue to be battlegrounds for the building of societies, and education can either be utilized to uphold the status quo or create a just and sustainable future. In a world where climate disasters are disrupting access to education, where eco-anxiety is prevalent among youth, and where pollution impacts of the health of millions of children, we must ensure that young people are equipped to tackle societal issues and the biggest issue facing our generation – the climate crisis.

Yet, we still lack comprehensive climate justice education. The Global Education Monitoring Report at UNESCO and the MECCE Project’s recent global mapping showed that the world scored only 50% in a test on how extensively their education systems cover climate change in their curriculum and syllabi. It also showed that most of the content related to climate change is still only taught in a science class, and not covered across other subject areas.

Attending public schools in Texas, I saw this playing out in practice. I saw how climate change was briefly mentioned and only framed as a future issue that will impact polar bears. The solutions that were brought up didn’t go beyond recycling and reducing one’s personal carbon footprint. It wasn’t until I interned for PODER’s Young Scholars for Justice (YSJ) program as a teenager, that the pieces began to fall into place. The YSJ curriculum centers environmental justice organizing, BIPOC movement history, local Indigenous cultures, and a critical analysis of social-political structures. Through various lessons, art and poetry workshops, guest speakers, and participating in organizing I was able to put words to describe the what, why, and how of the inequalities I had experienced and observed around me. It was also the first time I realized that traditional knowledge is a critical part of climate solutions. The cosmological stories of plants, tree spirits, Bodhisattva etc passed down to me from my Hakka & Indigenous Taiwanese ancestors were full of wisdom. The cultural knowledge I had grown up with was valuable outside my home.

Over the years, I’ve worked on numerous campaigns, from fighting against the petrochemical industry and for access to clean and affordable water, to advocating for fossil fuel phase out and cumulative impact policies. But it was only because the climate justice education I received, through PODER, through my mom’s stories, through community, through radical professors, through organizing allowed me to turn despair into action. I see education as a practice of freedom, as an opportunity to reclaim culture, rewrite history, and reimagine our world.

This is what led me to co-create environmental justice curricula and programming alongside our incredible BIPOC team, through my nonprofit Start:Empowerment.

I believe it is imperative for all K-12 students to have access to comprehensive climate education, one that centers traditional ecologies, justice, critical consciousness, social-emotional learning, STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics) and action.

We must go beyond simple awareness of the climate crisis to understanding its social-political root causes and solutions. We owe it to the next generation to provide them with the tools and knowledge needed to tackle the climate crisis and systemic oppression. Only then, can we imagine and build a different world – and I sincerely hope that our future generations will be given the right to dream. Perhaps in 2075 – who knows what the world will be!

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