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We speak with Tom Roderick, founding executive director of the Morningside Center for Teaching Social Responsibility; Jan Zuckerman, Co-founder of Sunnyside Environmental School in Portland, Oregon; and Graham Klag, an alumnus of Sunnyside Environmental School. We discuss Tom's book, Teach for Climate Justice: A Vision for Transforming Education. Tom explains that climate chaos and social justice are inextricably linked, and proposes a program for addressing both. He centers the concept of the beloved community.
Overview
00:00-01:07 Intros
01:07-03:57 Why “Climate Justice?’
03:57-06:00 Connection between climate change and social justice
06:00-07:34 The book’s primary audience
07:34-09:30 Teaching for climate justice and SEL
09:30-11:51 Sunnyside Environmental School
11:51-15:37 Meshing hands-on learning with Oregon’s state testing requirements
15:37-16:43 Storyline
16:43-19:24 Creating a “beloved community”
19:24-21:23 Impact on Graham Klag’s life as an alum
21:23-30:10 Wolf education project with ranchers’ families
30:10-34:37 Encouraging students to be hopeful
34:37-37:22 Landless Rural Workers Movement (MST, Brazil) and “contentious co-governance)
37:22-40:00 Teach for Climate Justice Project
40:00-41:27 Civil resistance
41:27-43:13 SEL in Phoenix Talent schools in Eastern Oregon
43:13- Outro
Transcript
Click here to see the full transcription of this episode.
References
Soundtrack by Poddington Bear
Photo teachforclimatejustice.org
By Ethical Schools4.7
1212 ratings
We speak with Tom Roderick, founding executive director of the Morningside Center for Teaching Social Responsibility; Jan Zuckerman, Co-founder of Sunnyside Environmental School in Portland, Oregon; and Graham Klag, an alumnus of Sunnyside Environmental School. We discuss Tom's book, Teach for Climate Justice: A Vision for Transforming Education. Tom explains that climate chaos and social justice are inextricably linked, and proposes a program for addressing both. He centers the concept of the beloved community.
Overview
00:00-01:07 Intros
01:07-03:57 Why “Climate Justice?’
03:57-06:00 Connection between climate change and social justice
06:00-07:34 The book’s primary audience
07:34-09:30 Teaching for climate justice and SEL
09:30-11:51 Sunnyside Environmental School
11:51-15:37 Meshing hands-on learning with Oregon’s state testing requirements
15:37-16:43 Storyline
16:43-19:24 Creating a “beloved community”
19:24-21:23 Impact on Graham Klag’s life as an alum
21:23-30:10 Wolf education project with ranchers’ families
30:10-34:37 Encouraging students to be hopeful
34:37-37:22 Landless Rural Workers Movement (MST, Brazil) and “contentious co-governance)
37:22-40:00 Teach for Climate Justice Project
40:00-41:27 Civil resistance
41:27-43:13 SEL in Phoenix Talent schools in Eastern Oregon
43:13- Outro
Transcript
Click here to see the full transcription of this episode.
References
Soundtrack by Poddington Bear
Photo teachforclimatejustice.org

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