Should Texas Science Textbooks Cover Climate Change?

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Kids are affected by it but can't learn about it

taught his students in Austin about climate change and its human drivers for a decade, even though it wasn't required by Texas' education standards, the. Events like the Halloween floods in 2013 or Winter Storm Uri in 2021 made climate change a reality for some of his students, so teaching them about it seemed necessary.

"They woke up to water rising up to their beds and having to go onto the roof of their home," Carlisle said about the floods that affected some of his KIPP public charter school students living in Southeast Austin's Dove Springs neighborhood.

“I felt like it was really unethical to have a science class where your students are being directly impacted by climate change, and to not give them the tools for understanding why it was that these things were happening.” , an Austin-based watchdog group, appointed a panel of scientists and educators to review the proposed textbooks and other materials.

"Public school will be the last educational opportunity for many students, and it is the logical arena to inform them about realities they will need to understand for the rest of their lives," saidspokesperson confirmed that the district will adhere to textbooks adopted by the state, as they have been doing. As Carlisle did while teaching science at a KIPP school, some teachers will go beyond curriculum requirements, but not all have the resources to do so.

 

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