How students can use storytelling to bring the dangers of climate change to life
With the stark “code red” warnings from the world’s climate experts in the most recent report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) still ringing in our ears, it’s vital to give as many people as possible the tools with which to tackle the climate crisis. And key to this is encouraging climate literacy.
Climate literacy is the ability to identify, understand and explain information associated with climate science. Being climate literate allows individuals to become active participants in the fight against climate change.
Over the past few years, many young people and educators have pushed for the inclusion of climate literacy in national curricula. So what are the best ways in which this can be embedded within already packed school timetables?
The importance of stories
True climate literacy must address not only the science of climate change, but also issues of climate (in)justice, including how climate change affects people and places unevenly and amplifies inequalities within and across nations.
However, at present, much of climate change education is focused on the physical aspects of climate change, often at a global scale. Many people in developed countries like the UK therefore see climate change happening elsewhere and to other people, with less relevance to their own lives.
This collective psychological distancing means many fail to recognise the urgency of the climate crisis. We need to start highlighting the local effects of climate change to ground abstract understanding in reality.
One way to do this is through visual storytelling. Storytelling, often involving drawings and paintings, has been used by human communities to pass on knowledge or tales of caution for at least 30,000 years – as you can see from the cave painting below.
One effect of storytelling is its ability to create cognitive dissonance: the mental conflict and discomfort felt when a person’s behaviour does not align with their beliefs. Stories that demonstrate the consequences of not acting eco-consciously – especially if those consequences are shown visually – can be a good way to do this, leading to individuals being more likely to take climate action either in their own lives or by confronting corporate activities.
The Withernsea project
As part of the INSECURE project, which looks at how young people engage with coastal change, our research team at the University of Hull worked with geography teachers at Withernsea High School to develop new ways in which they could explore the local realities of climate change outside of the classroom. Withernsea, a town in an area known as Holderness on the east coast of England, is home to one of the world’s fastest receding coastlines with an average erosion rate of two metres per year.
Coastal retreat has in fact been recorded since Roman times, with over 30 settlements estimated to have been lost to the North Sea in the last 2,000 years. But the rates of retreat are accelerating due to changes in climate activity such as enhanced rainfall and extended periods of drought, and will continue to accelerate as sea levels rise, placing already vulnerable communities quite literally on the edge.