Skip to main content

Tackling Climate Change through Environmental Justice High School

EcoRise

This multi-lesson resource set for high school is focused on environmental justice and social science. It asks students to consider inequality and justice in the context of their own lives and the environment through a series of both hands-on and research-focused activities. This unit supports student understanding of the multiple, complex issues and perspectives of environmental justice in the United States. In part one, students complete a group activity under the pressures of environmental discrimination and then evaluate their success. The second and third part uses short videos to explain a real life example of overcoming environmental discrimination to encourage students to reflect on the complexity of these issues. In the final part, students debate a solution to an issue using assigned roles in a town hall platform.

Click to View

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.

  • Keep in mind that using role-play scenarios for learning can invite stereotyping. Discuss how to avoid this possibility before engaging in the limited resources or town hall meeting suggested for this lesson set. Note that this lesson set contains multiple variations on classroom set-up which necessitates good classroom management. Try out the materials you choose for the tower building exercise in lesson one before using them for the lesson to make sure they're effective for the activity. This resource focuses on traditional environmental justice categories of race and class. There is an expansive literature on the gendered dimensions of environmental justice and an emergent literature on queer dimensions of environmental justice and the intersection of disability and environmental justice. Teachers could expand discussion of intersectional environmental justice by adding these dimensions to these lessons. This lesson was designed for four 90 minute sessions, we recommend breaking this lesson down into smaller parts for smaller class periods.