Climate Change Education within Canada’s Regional Curricula: A Systematic Review of Gaps and Opportunities

Authors

Keywords:

climate change, education, curriculum analysis, formal education Canada

Abstract

This paper reports on curriculum analysis of climate change expectations in Canada’s provincial curricula. The research is focused on curriculum policy in Canadian provinces; however, it pertains to an international audience as Article 12 of the Paris Agreement, the international treaty on climate mitigation, adaptation and finance, calls for signatories to “enhance climate change education,” and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) have called for environmental education to be a core curriculum component by 2025, which will require all countries to evaluate and improve their curricula globally. Curriculum policy within Canada has not yet been aligned with these policy calls, and our analysis showed fractured and uneven inclusion of climate change. Data findings present explicit climate change education curriculum expectations for each province according to grade, subject, and mandatory versus elective courses. The review shows uneven inclusion of climate change topics, themes, and units within grade 7 – 12 curricula, with most expectations occurring in elective senior secondary courses. A second level of analysis with a ranking tool indicates shallow inclusion. The paper concludes with recommendations for addressing gaps.

Author Biographies

Ellen Field, Lakehead University

Assistant Professor, Faculty of Education, Lakehead University

Gia Spiropoulos, Lakehead University

former MEd Faculty of Education graduate, Lakehead and current secondary teacher

 

Anh Thu Nguyen, Lakehead University

MEd candidate, Faculty of Education, Lakehead University

Rupinder K. Grewal, Lakehead University

MEd candidate Faculty of Education, Lakehead University

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2023-05-08

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