Schoolroom Climate Change Indoctrination
In one assignment, students
measure the size of their family’s carbon footprint and suggest ways to shrink
it.
By Paul H. Tice in the Wall Street Journal
While many American parents are
angry about the Common Core educational standards and related student
assessments in math and English, less attention is being paid to the federally
driven green Common Core that is now being rolled out across the country. Under
the guise of the first new K-12 science curriculum to be introduced in 15
years, the real goal seems to be to expose students to politically correct
climate-change orthodoxy during their formative learning years.
The Next Generation of Science
Standards were released in April 2013. Thirteen states and the District of
Columbia have adopted them, including my state of New Jersey, which signed on
in July 2014 and plans to phase in the new curriculum beginning with the
2016-2017 school year. The standards were designed to provide students with an
internationally benchmarked science education.
While publicly billed as the result
of a state-led process, the new science standards rely on a framework developed
by the Washington, D.C.-based National Research Council. That is the research
arm of the National Academy of Sciences that works closely with the federal
government on most scientific matters.
All of the National Research
Council’s work around global warming proceeds from the initial premise of its
2011 report, “America’s Climate Choices” which states that “climate change is
already occurring, is based largely on human activities, and is supported by
multiple lines of scientific evidence.” From the council’s perspective, the
science of climate change has already been settled. Not surprisingly, global
climate change is one of the disciplinary core ideas embedded in the Next
Generation of Science Standards, making it required learning for students in
grade, middle and high school.
The National Research Council
framework for K-12 science education recommends that by the end of Grade 5,
students should appreciate that rising average global temperatures will affect
the lives of all humans and other organisms on the planet. By Grade 8, students
should understand that the release of greenhouse gases from burning fossil
fuels is a major factor in global warming. And by Grade 12, students should
know that global climate models are very effective in modeling, predicting and
managing the current and future impact of climate change. To give one example
of the council’s reach, these climate-change learning concepts have been
incorporated almost verbatim into the New Jersey Department of Education model
science curriculum.
Many of the background materials and
classroom resources used by instructors in teaching the new curriculum are
sourced from government agencies. For example, the Environmental Protection
Agency has an array of ready-to-download climate-change primers for classroom
use by teachers, including handouts on the link between carbon dioxide and
average global temperatures and tear sheets on the causal relationship between
greenhouse-gas emissions and rising sea levels.
Similarly, the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration and the Energy Department have their own Climate
Literacy & Energy Awareness Network, or Clean, which serves as an online
portal for the distribution of digital resources to help educators teach about
climate change. One such learning module requires students to measure the size
of their family’s carbon footprint and come up with ways to shrink it.
Relying on a climate-change
curriculum and teaching materials largely sourced from federal
agencies—particularly those of the current ideologically driven
administration—raises a number of issues. Along with the undue authoritative
weight that such government-produced documents carry in the classroom, most of
the work is one-sided and presented in categorical terms, leaving no room for a
balanced discussion. Moreover, too much blind trust is placed in the predictive
power of long-range computer simulations, despite the weak forecasting track
record of most climate models to date.
This is unfortunate because the
topic of man-made global warming, properly taught, would present many teachable
moments and provide an example of the scientific method in action. Precisely
because the science of climate change is still just a theory, discussion would
help to build student skills in critical thinking, argumentation and reasoning,
which is the stated objective of the new K-12 science standards.
For instance: Why has the planet
inconveniently stopped warming since the late 1990s even as carbon dioxide
levels have continued to rise? How reliable are historical measurements of
average global temperatures and atmospheric carbon dioxide levels when, before
the 1950s, much of the data are interpolated from such diverse sources as
weather balloons, kites, cloud observations, primordial tree rings and
Antarctic ice bubbles?
How statistically significant is a
1.4-degree Fahrenheit increase in average global surface temperatures since
1880 for a 4.6 billion-year-old planet with multiple ecosystems and a surface
area of some 200 million square miles? How dangerous is the current level of
carbon dioxide in the world’s atmosphere, when 400 parts per million expressed as
a percentage of the volume of the atmosphere would equate to only 0.04% or
approximately zero?
Employing such a Socratic approach
to teaching climate change would likely lead to a rational and
thought-provoking classroom debate on the merits of the case. However, that is
not the point of this academic exercise—which seems to be to indoctrinate young
people by using K-12 educators to establish the same positive political
feedback loop around global warming that has existed between the federal
government and the nation’s colleges and universities for the past two decades.
Mr. Tice works in investment
management and is a former Wall Street energy research analyst.
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