How can librarians connect children with trustworthy scientific source material about climate change? Here we look at ways to include intellectual freedom concepts in STEM/STEAM programming for children.
The national STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math) initiative has enjoyed broad support in schools and libraries for years. Yet, what science tells us about how humans are negatively impacting the world has become highly contentious and is even censored.
Global warming/climate change is the most far-reaching example. The media, pushed by political forces, give equal credence and air time to a small number of scientists who deny the predictions based on scientific studies.
Consider the tips and program ideas below, focusing on providing children with accurate, age-appropriate information on climate change.
Theme: Kids for the Climate! What Children Can Do About Climate Change / Global Warming
Rationale: Greta Thunberg, the Swedish teenager who started a worldwide movement to draw attention to climate change, has inspired millions of children and adults. When children hear her story, they want to know what they can do personally to help slow climate change.
Introduce the Topic: Start with a short introduction about climate change and the issues around it. The recent devastating fires in Australia and California underscore the threat from drought that comes with changing weather patterns. Describe renewable energy and compare it to energy from fossil fuels. Explore the threat to children’s health from climate change with information from the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Read: Our House Is on Fire! Greta Thunberg’s Call to Save the Planet by Jeanette Winter; What Is Climate Change? by Gail Herman; Why Are the Ice Caps Melting? The Dangers of Global Warming by Anne Rockwell
Alternate Titles: Listen by Holly M. McGhee; The Global Warming Express by Marina Weber (the author wrote this story as a child and became an activist at age 6); If Polar Bears Disappeared by Lily Williams
Extension Activities: Research American child activists for stopping climate change, such as Alexandria Villaseñor, Benji Backer, Varshini Prakash, Isra Hirsi. What led them to become activists?
Theme: Recycling
Rationale: Children can change their daily habits in simple ways that can help the environment and the people, animals, and plants in it.
Introduce the Topic: Bring in a box of clean items that were used in a home and discarded. Explain what recycling is and ask them to separate the items into “recyclable” or “garbage.”
Read: The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein; Green Living: No Action Too Small by Lucia Raatma; What a Waste: Trash, Recycling, and Protecting Our Planet by Jess French
Alternate Title: All That Trash: The Story of the 1987 Garbage Barge and Our Problem with Stuff by Meghan McCarthy
Extension Activities: Children collect or list the plastic, aluminum, and paper their household uses in one day.