Title: Moving beyond scientific knowledge: leveraging participation, relevance, and interconnectedness for climate education

Authors: Lauren B. Allen; Kevin Crowley

Addresses: Learning Research and Development Center, University of Pittsburgh, 3939 O'Hara Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA ' Learning Research and Development Center, University of Pittsburgh, 3939 O'Hara Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

Abstract: Climate change requires a massive global response: individuals, communities, regions, and nations all need to make substantial change to current habits and behaviours. Education is an important part of changing habit and behaviour, yet most contemporary climate change education focuses primarily on individual's knowledge about climate science, which research suggests has limited utility in supporting collective response to climate change. This article proposes a new focus on educational intervention that is sensitive to the shared need for rapid, collective impact. Drawing on socio-cultural learning theory and a review of research on climate change learning, we argue that interventions based on three core principles - participation, relevance, interconnectedness - are more likely to result in people taking steps to respond to climate change than interventions based on knowledge acquisition alone.

Keywords: climate education; climate change learning; limitations of climate knowledge acquisition; informal learning; participation for climate education; relevance for climate education; interconnectedness; collective efficacy; collective impact; socio-cultural learning; collective response to climate change.

DOI: 10.1504/IJGW.2017.084781

International Journal of Global Warming, 2017 Vol.12 No.3/4, pp.299 - 312

Received: 03 Jun 2015
Accepted: 19 Aug 2015

Published online: 29 Jun 2017 *

Full-text access for editors Full-text access for subscribers Purchase this article Comment on this article