|
OER Project Community
  • User
  • All Groups
    • Big History
    • World History
    • World History AP ®
    • Climate
  • Teacher's Lounge
    Announcements, tips & more
  • More
  • Cancel
  • Replies 8 replies
  • Subscribers 8 subscribers
  • Views 1518 views
  • Users 0 members are here
  • terrorism
  • Strategy for new course
  • Climate Project
  • Teaching Climate
  • curriculum changes
  • Integrating climate in classrooms
  • climate
  • Climate Curriculum
  • Homeland Security
  • Military
  • Climate studies
Related

Going to War with Climate Change Issues

Bryan Dibble
Bryan Dibble 1 month ago

Since just before the start of my school year, I’ve been researching how to weave the CLIMATE PROJECT into my courses, and I’ve been struck by how many natural connections exist -- including my thematic American History class American History Through War. Conflict and environment have always been linked, and finding those entry points allows me to bring climate discussions into the mainstream of what my school has already given permission to teach. I recently came across an article from March 2025 that left me stunned. The Pentagon announced it was canceling dozens of studies, including research on climate change impacts and global migration, framing the move as a way to save money. On paper, that might look efficient, but the reality is that climate-related disasters have already cost the military billions. Bases have been flooded, planes destroyed on the ground, and missions disrupted by extreme weather. Ignoring those realities doesn’t make them disappear, it simply leaves forces less prepared.  For educators, this underscores why we can’t afford to sideline climate issues. If I can embed climate change into a course as focused as war history, then any subject can create space for it. That’s how we normalize the work of the CLIMATE PROJECT across classrooms.  I’m sitting on a golden pillow in Selah, Washington- my district trusts me to choose curriculum based on my expertise.  Are you in a position to make unilateral changes to your curriculum?  Do you think you could modify your curriculum to add climate change issues? 

This is focus in 2021-22:  Preparing Army Installations to Combat Climate Change and Extreme Weather Events

This is the focus today: US military cancels climate change studies that Pentagon chief calls 'crap'

Quote from: Time Magazine

  • Reply
  • Cancel
  • Cancel
Parents
  • Laura Massa
    Laura Massa 8 days ago
    Bryan Dibble said:
    Once students started looking at the evidence, there was no pushback about whether climate change is real.

    I fully concur with your statement after reading your quote. The evidence is so compelling that evidence-based discussions tend to shift the focus from debate to understanding.

    • Cancel
    • Up 0 Down
    • Reply
    • Cancel
  • Bryan Dibble
    Bryan Dibble 7 days ago in reply to Laura Massa

     Laura Massa The key to unfolding evidence that might be controversial (not untrue) is having students lay it out instead of me.  I ask the big question, they go where the evidence takes them.  There are still a few articles left on the official "Department of War" website.  www.war.gov/.../

    • Cancel
    • Up 0 Down
    • Reply
    • Cancel
Reply
  • Bryan Dibble
    Bryan Dibble 7 days ago in reply to Laura Massa

     Laura Massa The key to unfolding evidence that might be controversial (not untrue) is having students lay it out instead of me.  I ask the big question, they go where the evidence takes them.  There are still a few articles left on the official "Department of War" website.  www.war.gov/.../

    • Cancel
    • Up 0 Down
    • Reply
    • Cancel
Children
  • Laura Massa
    Laura Massa 2 days ago in reply to Bryan Dibble

     Bryan Dibble I really like that approach--letting students discover and interpret the evidence themselves--  because it makes the learning deeper, shifting the focus from “the teacher’s opinion” to the process of inquiry itself. It also helps them practice evaluating sources critically. 

    How do you guide the discussion when the evidence leads to interpretations that might challenge their assumptions?

    • Cancel
    • Up 0 Down
    • Reply
    • Cancel