Deakin University
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Climate justice and curriculum justice: Young people's accounts of schools' uneven responses to their climate justice activism

The uneven ways in which climate change is taught (or not) within schools, and the uneven opportunities for students to experience justice-oriented climate education, are curricular injustices. Recent systematic reviews of Climate Change Education literature note a depoliticising tendency in climate change education, with official curriculum documents rarely engaging with issues of justice. This previous research raises questions about how young people involved in climate advocacy narrate their experiences of learning about climate change and justice in and beyond mainstream schooling. This article, co-authored with four Research Associates who are also climate justice advocates, explores young people's stories of learning (or not) about climate change and climate justice in school and social movement spaces. These accounts were shared during formal research conversations with 61 people and written in 59 survey responses: all participants identified as involved in youth-led climate justice networks across Australia. We draw on the concept of curricular justice to analyse the inequitable distribution of opportunities to experience justice-oriented approaches to teaching climate change for young people in Australian schools. Many of these young people describe turning beyond mainstream schooling to experience critical, collective and creative forms of climate justice education that bring climate change into direct connection with social justice. We argue that listening to young climate justice advocates' accounts of their schooling experiences offers valuable insights about the current conditions for learning and acting on climate change in schools. These insights can productively inform the development of justice-oriented climate change education.

Funding

Striking voices: Australian school-aged students' climate justice activism | Funder: Australian Research Council | Grant ID: DE220100103

History

Journal

Curriculum Journal

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0958-5176

eISSN

1469-3704

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Wiley

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