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Scientific Consensus: A Tsunami of Evidence

National Center for Science Education

This is the first lesson in a series of 6 lessons about climate change from the National Center for Science Education. The "Tsunami of Evidence" module directly addresses common preconceptions and misconceptions, and provides students with a foundational understanding of the relationship between science and media.

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Notes from our reviewers

The CLEAN collection is hand-picked and rigorously reviewed for scientific accuracy and classroom effectiveness. Read what our review team had to say about this resource below or learn more about how CLEAN reviews teaching materials.

  • This lesson is largely conceptual in nature and should be used to establish an common understanding of the scientific process (including peer review) and how scientific knowledge is integrated into our everyday lives. Although it does provide an understanding of certain climate-related topics, it does not teach explicit earth systems or climate change lessons. This lesson is broken up into sections A-E. Consider taking one class period per section and assign leftover material as individual or group homework. Teachers may want to consider guiding students through Project Drawdown ([link https://drawdown.org/]) or other solution-based resources to help them avoid feeling hopeless or overwhelmed at the end of this unit. From the lesson set: "It's recommended that students work through the NCSE Nature of Science lesson sets at some point during the year. However, if this is not possible, be sure to introduce students to FLICC, a framework for understanding science denial, prior to presenting this lesson set." To really understand graphing, modeling, and peer-review, students and teachers will need more background than the lesson provides. Read through this unit and consider what your students will need to understand and work work through it. Some classes may need extensive preparation.