Give our Students a Better Future by Advancing Environmental, Energy and Climate Education

Our Call to Action: There is a gap we need to close and we need your help!

We have a big problem in Alberta: our young people lack environmental and energy literacy, knowledge about climate—and hope for the future. Our students are asking for education that closes this gap and addresses this problem. Alberta students deserve to learn how to balance the complexities of stewarding nature, meeting energy demand, reducing greenhouse gases, and creating prosperity - and we're not there yet. Their teachers work hard, but tell us they lack quality resources to use in their teaching, and are limited by a curriculum that does not adequately address energy and climate.

Check out the Youth Reports for the evidence that supports this call to action!

Our Ask of Education Leaders

Together, we can solve this problem. Alberta students deserve more environmental education, helping them prepare for the future that they will inhabit, the jobs they’ll create, and the society they’ll build. By empowering students to become active citizens, environmental education gives them hope for the future. For over a decade we have worked with opinion leaders, school board and government officials, and youth on how to solve this problem. On behalf of Alberta’s almost 750,000 K-12 students, we call upon Alberta’s education leaders to create or enhance policies and plans that give students more environmental education.

View the Infographic Summary

 

We ask the Alberta government to… 

  • Strengthen the Alberta curriculum by incorporating the community’s recommendations, captured in the Curriculum for a Sustainable Future
  • Support and fund more relevant professional learning for practicing and pre-service teachers
  • Help school boards implement more cost-saving energy efficiency and renewable energy solutions in schools – and link these to student learning

We ask the Trustees and Superintendents who govern school boards to ‘take the next step’ in their work…

  • Recognize and celebrate best practices in this area by schools, teachers, and students
  • Promote and enhance outdoor education, making it easier for teachers to connect students with nature
  • Emphasize relevant teacher professional learning
  • Implement more cost-saving energy efficiency and renewable energy solutions in schools - and link these to student learning
  • Create student advisory groups to engage youth voice

 

We ask the Alberta Teachers’ Association to enhance teacher professional learning, helping teachers...

  • Better connect their curriculum to topics in the environment/energy/climate space
  • Access quality teaching resources
  • Take their students outdoors, fostering students' wellness and connection to community – and keeping them healthy during COVID-19
  • Support student critical thinking around controversial issues
  • Support student environmental citizenship through actions projects – giving our kids hope for the future

School Boards (Trustees and Superintendents)

To help school boards, we've provided policy ideas and examples for school boards in four categories: governance, facilities & operations, teaching & learning, and community partnerships. We've also provided a handout with many of the links as well. Download the Policy Recommendations for School Boards.

 

Our Ask of Parents and Other Members of the Public

  • Share this webpage with your friends and family
  • Share this webpage – and 'our ask of Trustees and Superintendents' – with your local school trustee and superintendent, then ask them what they will do to support this
  • Share this webpage - and ‘our ask of the Alberta government’ – with your MLA, then ask them what they will do to support this
  • Download our slide deck and use it to engage a key audience

 

 


Thank you to the following for supporting this work:

      

“Having environmental education will cultivate knowledgeable and caring future generations who will be brave instead of fearful and hopeful instead of hopeless” 

- Kelly Wu, Ross Shepard High School, Edmonton