Submitted
2024 Global Learning Challenge

Young Climate Authors

Team Leader
Aneesa Jamal
Solution Overview & Team Lead Details
Our Organization
Cogitation Club
What is the name of your solution?
Young Climate Authors
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
Climate stories by teens & youth from the Global South
In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Chennai, Tamil Nadu, India
In what country is your solution team headquartered?
  • India
What type of organization is your solution team?
  • Nonprofit
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?


Global Learning Challenge

In a survey with over 10,000 children and youth, aged 16-25 in 10 countries, 59% of the participants reported feeling extremely worried, sad, angry,  helpless or guilty about climate change (Hickman et al., 2021). In another global survey, 300,000 students from 54 countries revealed that while 56% of the high school students had poor conceptual understanding of the causes, impacts and dynamics of climate change (Oliver & Adkins, 2020).   

To address the negative cognitive and affective responses to climate change and the lack of behavioral pathways,  UNESCO recommends the following learning objectives for SDG 13: Climate Action (Education for Sustainable Development Goals: Learning Objectives., 2017) : 

1. Improved Climate literacy i.e. learning about the causes & impacts of climate change and measures for mitigation & adaptation and their effectiveness.  

2. Socio-emotional learning: Learners should be able to understand their impact on the climate, explain the dynamics of climate change and its complex impacts, encourage others to take action and be able to collaborate with others to create strategies to combat climate change.

Furthermore, UNESCO recommends the use of innovative learning methods which integrate the cognitive, affective and behavioral domains of learning (Getting Every School Climate-Ready How Countries Are Integrating Climate Change Issues in Education, 2021). Other research echoes these recommendations. According to Rousell & Cutter-Mackenzie-Knowles (2020)’s climate education should be interdisciplinary, cooperative, participatory, place-based and experiential. Monroe et al. (2019)’s systematic review of literature emphasized that climate education should focus on personally relevant and meaningful information, use innovative and engaging teaching methods, enable discussions, provide interactions with scientists, address misconceptions and implement school or community-based projects. The UN emphasizes the importance of climate related action (Gibb, 2016; Not Just Hot Air: Putting Climate Change Education into Practice, 2015a). Hence there is an urgent need for effective CCE programs which are meaningful, relatable, place-based and address the three domains of learning holistically. 

However, the existing approaches to CCE globally are narrowly focused only on the cognitive domain and that too on knowledge transmission of the scientific causes and impacts of climate change. Students get daunted by the complexity and systemic nature of climate change, the jargon confuses them and they see no clear pathways to get involved and make a difference. This approach fails to build good climate literacy, does not address climate emotions and fails to show pathways for meaningful climate action ( Monroe et al., 2019; Rousell & Cutter-Mackenzie-Knowles, 2020). However, we cannot realistically expect schools and traditional curriculum development bodies to create radical approaches to CCE since these bodies replicate dominant paradigms which do not address the underlying socio-historical-economic causes of climate change (Iyengar & Kwauk, 2021). It falls to grassroots environmental education (EE) bodies to create and impart such an education. However, these bodies do not have expertise in curriculum development or pedagogy. 

In summary, there is a need for an effective CCE program that helps students develop holistic climate literacy, manage and channel their climate emotions and enable them to take climate action.

 

What is your solution?

 

The Young Climate Authors (YCA) is a book-authoring program where students author & digitally publish storybooks on climate change & climate justice.  Outcomes from the program are in line with UN SDG 4 (Quality Education), SDG 13 (Climate Action) and SDG 17 (Partnerships for Goals).  

The YCA uses a framework based on Project-Based-Learning, critical pedagogy, transdisciplinary learning, arts based expression and storytelling.  Place-based pedagogy enables educators to contextualize the YCA  to local realities making learning meaningful and relatable. The constructivist, transdisciplinary design gives students the voice and choice to construct their knowledge and meaning-making about climate change. The critical lens builds understanding of climate justice. Storytelling and art shapes the understanding into storybooks. The YCA integrates cognitive, affective & behavioral domains of learning through multimodal learning experiences focusing on  

  1. Climate Justice Learning : The YCA helps students understand how climate change is rooted in the inequality and dispossession perpetuated by the tri-phenomena of industrialization, colonization and capitalism and shaped by existing unequal societal structures. Students use this lens & their interactions with the local community to understand how climate change differentially impacts people based on their positionality. 

  2. Managing Climate emotion: The YCA intentionally addresses climate emotion through pedagogical techniques like discussions, reflections and meeting with climate activists & stewardship activities to help students identify and manage emotions they experience when learning about climate change. 

  3. Drive for Climate action: Storytelling has historically been a key part of social change movements as storytelling touches hearts, builds bridges and spurs action. The YCA provides the pathway for students to use digital storytelling as a powerful climate action.  

  4. Glocal Perspectives about climate change: 

    1. Local: The YCA contextualizes the learning about climate change to local realities by understanding the impact of climate change and the response/ resilience measures locally through field trips, interactions with local activists and ethnographic research. This helps students imagine solutions which are rooted in their communities. The stories are also a form of documentation about place-based climate change experiences in the global south. 

    2. Global: The storybooks create shared understanding about the commonality and diversity of experiences of climate change with a global audience.  

 The YCA is implemented by EE organizations in non-formal educational settings, hence cuts the Gordian Knot of challenges of CCE in formal schooling. Educators from these organizations undergo a 12 week training on the YCA. They are then mentored in customizing the YCA to their local realities. Finally, implementation support in the form of consulting and hand-holding is provided.

Technology forms a core part of the learning experiences and delivery. Participants use technology to research climate change through online climate learning resources including text, visuals and audio, to communicate with peers via Email/ Whatsapp, create their storybooks using phones, Canva and illustration apps, amplify their work through social media using Instagram, LinkedIn, Facebook etc. The educators use learning management systems like Google Classroom or Canvas for organizing the learning modules. All these facets help build the much needed digital literacy skills for children in the global south.

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

A key goal for the YCA is to reach marginalized students in the Global South who bear the brunt of climate change and climate injustice through environmental education (EE) organizations embedded in these communities. These students often lack access to mainstream education itself for a plethora of reasons to do with institutionalized structures of oppression. When they do get access to education, innovative and cognitively challenging approaches are rarely used, given the underlying racist/classist beliefs that these students cannot ‘cope’ with such challenges (Sutoris, 2019).  Furthermore, educational programs which foreground their lived experiences or perspectives are invisibilized. 

Our research into the outcomes of previous book-authoring programs implemented with the marginalized Muslim community in India,  revealed a multidimensional impact of book authoring for environmental issues/ climate change. It also demonstrated how progressive pedagogies can be used to effectively provide CCE where students are co-creators of knowledge. The programs had a transformational impact as participants learned about and eventually authored storybooks about power & privilege in their communities and how that affects the marginalized humans and the more-than-humans in the face of  climate change. Cognitive outcomes included improved climate literacy, use of creative thinking & problem solving, academic engagement and use of metacognition. Additionally, the program improved literacy, communication & digital skills and honed thinking skills. The identity as an author, and the global reach of their books, created a sense of empathy, agency, empowerment and responsibility in the participants. The YCA improved socio-emotional learning as students improved  collaboration & communication skills.  The students' participation in the program had a multiplier effect on families and friends (Jamal et al, 2023, 2023a, 2023b).  We anticipate similar outcomes with the other marginalized target populations.

Specifically in Phase 2, the YCA will be pilot-tested at five sites in four countries with marginalized communities in 2024. The following are the details of the target populations for the Phase 2 pilot test:  

1. Chennai Climate Action Group, Chennai, India.  Population Characteristics: Urban, marginalized Dalit communities who bear the brunt of caste oppression in India, mix of gender. Age: 14-18. 

2. RHEADS, Chittor, India.  Population Characteristics: Rural, mixed gender, tribal communities who have faced historic socio-economic and cultural marginalization. Ages 11-14. 

3. African Network for the Promotion of Environmental Education (ANPEE), Yaounde, Cameroon. Population Characteristics: Urban, mixed gender, internally displaced communities. Age: 14-18.

4. Green Girls Platform, Lilongwe, Malawi. Population Characteristics:Urban, marginalized, largely female communities. Age: 14-18.

5. YES Global Initiatives, Kampala, Uganda, Population Characteristics: Urban, mixed gender, urban ghettoized youth 14-18.

How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?

Our background as members of the Muslim minority community, constructivist educators, practitioner-turned-researchers with over a decade of experience in alternative approaches to environmental education gives us the credentials to design and deliver the YCA.

We have over a decade of experience as community leaders.  We founded Al Qamar Academy, a non-profit school for Muslim minorities in Chennai, India, with the vision that schooling should encourage freedom of choice; forge community connections; enable stewardship activities; and contextualize the learning to local contexts. A key goal was to foster environmental consciousness in children through place & nature based education. Cogitation Club was started to provide similar learning opportunities to students not enrolled at Al Qamar. Since this kind of schooling was alien to the community which typically associated schooling with test scores, rote learning and textbooks, we conducted outreach programs, training sessions and community workshops, events.  Eventually, the school was recognized for its innovativeness by  educators and educational bodies in India, including the Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education at the Tata Institute for Fundamental Research. 

The school shut down during the pandemic but Cogitation Club continued its work. The loss of the school made me realize that for my work to have a greater impact, I would need to upskill myself and enrolled as a doctoral student. The PhD program adds the needed academic rigor to my decade of field experience as a practitioner. Additionally, it enables me to integrate deeply held beliefs on how learning should happen for children, on how education must inculcate a sense of connection with other humans and more-than-humans, and how we must collectively and creatively imagine solutions for crises facing our planet today. My specific research focus to develop and implement an integrated, transdisciplinary and multimodal curriculum for climate change for Indian students led to the development of the YCA into a formal mini-curriculum in 2023.

When we pilot tested YCA with a cohort of Muslim preteens and teens in Chennai, our identity as Indian Muslims and for some, our identities as women as well as our practitioner experience of  educators embedded in the Muslim  community for over a decade shaped our work with the students who belonged to the same community. Together we built an understanding of climate change which reflected how Muslims, despite forming one-sixth of the global population, are minimally represented in the climate change discourse and policy making. Furthermore, our experience of climate change and our narratives which reflect our identities as Indian Muslims are rare. These in-group self-realizations provided the impetus for the students to create place-based stories on climate change. 

However, we recognize that our perspectives are limited to who we are and the sum of our experience, which cannot presume to know the realities for other marginalized communities or speak for them. Hence, we designed the YCA as a flexible framework which enables different educators to create learning experiences within the framework which are specific to the socio-economic, historical and cultural contexts of their learners.  

Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Provide the skills that people need to thrive in both their community and a complex world, including social-emotional competencies, problem-solving, and literacy around new technologies such as AI.
Which of the UN Sustainable Development Goals does your solution address?
  • 4. Quality Education
  • 13. Climate Action
  • 17. Partnerships for the Goals
What is your solution’s stage of development?
  • Pilot
Please share details about why you selected the stage above.

We have developed and implemented three versions of the environmental book authoring programs in Chennai, India, resulting in 45 child-authored storybooks (https://www.cogitation.in/book-authoring-programs/read-earth-author-books). We have also created and implemented an educator training on the YCA. The details are given below:

  1. Young Earth Authors (2017): Designed and conducted the Young Earth Authors Program where 13 middle schoolers authored storybooks for children on nature, the environment and local social issues in Chennai, India.

  2. Young Earth Authors (2020): Reimplemented the Young Earth Authors program during the pandemic as an online offering with 14 Participants who authored storybooks on nature, the environment and environmental degradation in Chennai, India.

  3. Young Climate Authors (2023): Designed and implemented the Young Climate Authors, a climate change and climate justice education program with 18 middle and high school students in Chennai, India, resulting in 17 storybooks.

  4. YCA Educator Training (2024) : Designed and conducted a 12 week online educator training program for 20 environmental educators from EE organizations in 9 countries across 3 continents on the YCA. 

The YCA went through a Stage 1 Pilot test with a small group of students belonging to the Muslim community in Chennai, India. In order to scale up the program we need to conduct a Stage 2 Pilot Test with other communities and in other countries. This will give us a broader understanding of the efficacy of the program and provide insights on where the program has to be modified. Hence, we classified the stage of our solution as a pilot. 


Why are you applying to Solve?

The YCA is a very innovative climate change education program developed using several research backed recommendations. However, the program needs to be scaled up to reach as many children in the global south as possible. MIT Solve provides the following opportunities to help us address the barriers we currently face:

  1. Technology support to develop an LMS based version of the YCA educator training which would enable scaling up the program to reach many EE organizations across the globe. This is absolutely crucial to rapidly create a pool of trained educators for implementing the YCA in many places. 

  2. Mentorship for business development and growth including a business model which would provide financial independence to support future implementations. As educators, our expertise lies in curriculum development and implementation and we are not experts in designing effective business models for social impact. 

  3. Networking support & media communication strategy to amplify the program to stakeholders and potential supporters. This is required to expand our customer base, build buy-in from stakeholders and reach out to potential funders. As a small business based out of the global south, our access to meaningful resources and people is quite limited. 

  4. Funding through grants for the Phase 2 Pilot Test and for creating the LMS based modularized educator training. This support is crucial as most EE organizations in the Global South are cash strapped and unable / unwilling to pay for the YCA related training and services especially since the program is in the nascent stages.

In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
  • Business Model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
  • Financial (e.g. accounting practices, pitching to investors)
  • Product / Service Distribution (e.g. delivery, logistics, expanding client base)
  • Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
  • Technology (e.g. software or hardware, web development/design)
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Aneesa Jamal
More About Your Solution
Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Solution Team:
Aneesa  Jamal
Aneesa Jamal