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Climate Emotions in the K-12 Classroom: A Cross-Generational Conversation, Saturday, October 5, 2024, 1:00pm - 2:00pm EST

REGISTER: https://tinyurl.com/ytm98za8

In this workshop, join Kate Schapira and Carolyn McGrath as they discuss climate emotions, how they show up in the classroom, and how teachers and counselors can help students work with and through them. Kate and Carolyn will be joined by students who helped review the Educator’s Guide to Climate Emotions. The ecological changes happening in the world evoke strong feelings, especially for young people whose lives are being and will continue to be altered by a changing climate. Educators bear a responsibility, not only to teach students about the causes, consequences, and responses to climate change but also, with counselors and parents, to help young people navigate the emotional terrain of living on a rapidly warming planet. Please download the Educator’s Guide before this workshop: Educator's Guide to Climate Emotions.

Meet your hosts:

Carolyn McGrath is a visual arts teacher and school sustainability leader who has worked in New Jersey public schools for over 26 years. She is a passionate advocate for interdisciplinary climate change education thatintegrates art, justice, emotion, and action. As part of the Climate Psychology Alliance of North America, she co-authored An Educator's Guide to Climate Emotions.

Kate Schapira has been listening to people about climate change for ten years, at the Climate Anxiety Counseling booth and elsewhere. She lives in Providence, Rhode Island, where she teaches nonfiction writing at Brown University and is involved with local efforts toward environmental justice, climate justice and peer mental health
support.  The exercises in her first work of nonfiction, Lessons from the Climate Anxiety Counseling Booth, offer actionable steps for connecting with others, identifying and activating community abundance, matching your skills with organized climate activism, and imagining a radically more livable future in order to bring it into being.

Meet the student panelists:

Maksim Batuyev is a musician and Founder of Climate Cafe LA. Maksim has reached millions and helps others do the same for their causes. Aside from his artist project, he helped launch the global mental health start-up Force of Nature in 2020 and has collaborated with several ambitious leaders to deliver impact. DoSomething's "Generation Future" award winner, he served on the Gen Z advisory board for the Climate Mental Health Network, the Youth Council for Hinge's "OneMoreHour" initiative, and currently sits on the International Youth Advisory Board for The Resilience Project.

Vanessa Villanueva, daughter of Mexican immigrants, grew-up in the Inland Empire and centers community resilience as the focal point of every project she undertakes. She has over a decade of experience in grassroots activism that addresses climate, environmental, and social justice that uplifts community in the Inland Empire. She is a graduate of the University of Hawaii at Manoa, where she earned a Bachelor's degree in Natural Resource and Environmental Management with a specialization in Community and Cultural Resource Management.

Previous
Previous
27 September

Climate Week NYC 2024: Climate Education for Sustainable Cities: Solutions That Inspire (in-person event co-hosted by the NY Climate Exchange, The Trust for Governors Island, GrowNYC, and UNESCO

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Next
5 October

Planting the Future Speaker Series: Building in Psychological Tools & Well-being into Parenting and the K-College Environmental Science Curriculum, Saturday, October 5, 19, and 26 (note times)