This activity improves students' research, communication, and public speaking skills.
Students acting as journalists practice their creativity and journalism skills, while students acting as climate scientists practice communicating science in a clear and straightforward manner.
Additional Prerequisites
Students must be familiar with the interview process and will need to access the credible resources suggested in the Teacher Guide for research.
You can have students choose their partners or select partners for them.
Differentiation
For students that need additional support, provide certain climate change topics for them to discuss, like hurricanes, sea level rise, melting Arctic ice, melting glaciers, wildfires, or drought.
As an extension, students could set up an interview with a member of their community and record it as a video to share with classmates.
For the topic of climate activism, students can read about Peter Kalmus, one of many climate scientists who have stopped flying because of the climate crisis.
Students could reach out to actual climate scientists in their local area or at their local university to request an interview.
Scientist Notes
Teaching Tips
Standards
Resource Type and Format
About the Partner Provider
ClimateScience
ClimateScience inspires young talents to seek careers in fields where they contribute to climate solutions. By providing beautifully illustrated, understandable, science-based educational content for free for everyone, they are building the fundamentals for Climate Education.
Related Teaching Resources
All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.