It’s more than four years since I wrote Climate Alarmism – the Religion that Unites us all. In a comment under that piece I made reference to a Guardian article which complained:

There is still no mention of the climate crisis in the national curriculum for England in primary schools, and in key stage 3 science very little of the curriculum relates to climate education. Incredibly, the last major update to the national geography curriculum for England in 2013 saw the then education secretary, Michael Gove, attempt to drop climate change.

In essence, the causes and effects of the climate crisis are now taught in most secondary schools. What’s not being taught are the practical skills needed to transition towards a net zero lifestyle. Climate change isn’t tangible – young students lack the frame of reference to care if daffodils flower earlier every year or each summer is hotter than the last.

So what needs to change? We need a green curriculum that starts in early years and extends through all key stages. Properly taught, climate change education should be a thread through all subjects – not just science and geography….

Well, all that might be about to change. The Curriculum and Assessment Review’s Final Report was published last month. It may be a fine piece of work in many respects (or it may not). I am not qualified to comment, my involvement with education extending no further than making my way through the education system as a child and young adult (my further education ended almost 40 years ago) and acting for a few years as school governor at a primary school (also many years ago). Thus, I express no opinions at all regarding the bulk of the Report; instead I focus on one part of it alone.

That part of the Review is the section (or several sections, since it runs through it at every level) that the Report heads “Climate education and sustainability” (page 40 onwards). It’s worth noting the opening words of the section (on page 40):

The climate crisis is already impacting our physical landscape and many connected aspects of our lives.

I have two points to make in connection with this. First is a matter of personal taste – “impact” is a noun, not a verb. If you must use it as the Report does, then the correct usage, I believe, is “impact on”. One might have hoped that a Report written by a panel of eminent educators might know that. The second point is the use of the phrase “climate crisis” in an official document that seeks to affect the way the country’s children are educated. “Climate crisis” is a political coinage, not a scientific one. The IPCC does not use the term. It is an invention of the Guardian, and a phrase that is now also regularly used by the BBC – in both cases with political, rather than educational, motivation. Its use in a Report such as this is deeply disturbing.

A word search reveals five uses of the term “climate crisis” and 62 references to the word “climate”. On page 82, we’re told “The climate crisis is the most significant environmental challenge of modern times…”. That is a matter of opinion, not of fact. Of course, it’s an opinion held by most, if not all, of the members of the current UK government (and establishment, for that matter), but it’s deeply concerning that contentious opinions of this sort are embedded in an education report. Even more concerning is the way in which such contentious beliefs are, as a result, likely to be taught to children as though they are facts. And so education becomes indoctrination. How is this likely to play out, assuming the Report is implemented in full?

The quick and lazy way to see (I confess this is the route I have chosen) is to take a look at the Report wherever the word “climate” appears, and see what the Report then has to say. Thus:

Preparing learners for a changing world

This section of the Report is to be found at page 34. It commences:

Our curriculum must equip young people for a world that is changing quickly. Rapid technological advancements, including the rise of Artificial Intelligence (AI), are likely to significantly change the way we work. The climate crisis brings wide-ranging, urgent challenges to address – but also opportunities to seize, as we seek to restore our environment. Global geo-politics and means of communication are also shifting. New media channels are enabling greater connectivity than ever before, whilst amplifying the risks posed by online harms or misinformation.

Whilst this is largely unobjectionable (to me, at least, save for the “climate crisis” reference), it’s also a bit worrying in this context to see the reference to “misinformation”. If this means that pupils will be told to ignore sceptical websites asking intelligent questions and probing the official narrative, then I will be more than a little annoyed.

Under this head, we are told that one of the “applied knowledge areas (frequently referred to as ‘life skills’)” is “education on climate change and sustainability”. So long as it is education, and not indoctrination, I trust that all will be well. Nevertheless, I am worried.

Media literacy

This is where things take a turn, possibly for the worse:

Misinformation and disinformation can take many forms, including scientific (as in the case of anti-vaccine campaigns or climate change denial)….

As we sceptics never tire of saying, there is all the difference in the world between denying the science around climate change and questioning the validity of aspects of it. If “education” around this subject strays into rendering verboten discussions about the policy implications of responding to climate change, then that would be deeply problematic.

Climate education and sustainability

As we have already seen, there is a section under this heading. This section strikes me as highly political, and consequently a matter for considerbale concern. As well as the words highlighted above, we find things like this:

Climate education is critically important to the economy and for providing learners with the knowledge they need for future work. The solutions to the climate crisis require the expansion of green technology, and this in turn is creating new industries and jobs, and affecting nearly all sectors of the economy. If young people are to make the most of these opportunities, it is crucial that they acquire the knowledge and skills necessary to do so.

Those are political opinions, and arguably have nothing to do with education. The next paragraph seems to suggest that we should provide instruction to areas that young people demand, rather than instructing them about what, objectively, is important. The problem with the following paragraph is that (ironically, given the Report’s concerns about misinformation) children have been influenced by the drumbeat of propaganda around climate change, and so they ask for education (propaganda?) in areas where they have already been softened up by endless propaganda.

Young people have been clear about their desire for a greater focus on this area in their education. As well as being a common theme in our engagement with young people, polling emphasises their level of concern and significant appetite for further information on climate change and climate science, including their desire to support solutions.

Footnotes to this section include this:

A survey by the Lancet (16 to 25- year-olds) similarly found four in five young people (84%) feel moderately to extremely worried about climate change, and over half (56%) feel powerless to tackle it: (Hickman, C., Marks, E., Pihkala, P., Clayton, S., Lewandowski, E., Mayall, E. et al. (2021).

And this:

A survey by the Woodland Trust & YouGov (of 16 to 24-year-olds) found that over two-thirds (70%) of young people are worried about climate change and nearly half (46%) feel they have no influence over it (YouGov / Woodland Trust (2023).

When and how did the carrying out of such surveys get to form the basis for deciding what should be included in the National Curriculum?

Consequently, I find the “therefore” in the following sentence to be somewhat confused and inappropriate:

We therefore make recommendations to bolster the presence of climate education and sustainability in the Science and Geography curricula, and to emphasise sustainability in the D&T curriculum….It is important to note that curriculum content is only one part of the issue: pedagogy has an important role in applying an engaging climate lens to existing curriculum content.

Citizenship

Here things take a strange turn:

Citizenship has a key role in teaching many areas of knowledge and skills that support young people to become active and thoughtful citizens. In addition to the three areas above, these include topics such as climate and sustainability…

Why? Still under the “Citizenship” heading:

Climate education: primary curriculum content should explore complementary and age-appropriate issues, including sustainable choices and habits and climate justice.

Again, why? Especially in the context of citizenship?

Still under this heading, putting climate change next to “misinformation” and “disinformation” is also suggestive of a determined establishment narrative to deny alternative views to be heard with regard to any aspect of the climate debate, including around policy choices.

Aligning with primary, content should also be strengthened to address societal changes in an age-appropriate way; for example, equality, equity and countering discrimination and hate, financial education, climate change and the rise of misinformation and disinformation.

Personal, Social, Health and Economic Education (PSHE)

It appears that climate change is to be inserted into just about every aspect of the curriculum. Under this heading, we find the following recommendation:

We recommend that the Government…Introduces a statutory measure to ensure that all are taught a core body of essential Citizenship content at primary (including elements of financial and media literacy, and climate change and sustainability)….Updates the secondary Programmes of Study for Citizenship to clarify their purpose, improve specificity and improve progression from Key Stage 3 to 4 or to the optional GCSE (including a renewed focus on financial literacy, media literacy, climate and sustainability, equality duties and challenging discrimination, and democracy and government).

Geography

This is starting to sound very much like indoctrination:

The current Geography curriculum has notable gaps in relation to climate change. Responses to the Call for Evidence highlighted strong support from subject experts and young people for greater attention to this in the Geography curriculum. The climate crisis is the most significant environmental challenge of modern times and, given that climate and weather are anchored in the existing Geography curriculum, it is essential that the Geography curriculum embeds climate education and sustainability appropriately across the key stages. In addition to the presently scant mention in the curriculum, the present overall purpose of study in the national curriculum does not explicitly identify climate change as a key concept. This has not prevented schools from teaching climate-related content but integrating it successfully has depended largely on the initiative of individual teachers or school leaders. The purpose of study in the national curriculum should be amended to ensure explicit wording, empowering the next generation of geographers to understand and tackle climate change through suitable climate education.

The indoctrination aspect is reinforced by the recommendation that follows:

Embeds climate change and sustainability more explicitly across different key stages, including across the physical geography, geographical applications and human geography sections of the curriculum, ensuring early, coherent, and more detailed engagement with climate education.

The problematic and highly significant word is “embeds”. The climate change narrative is to be embedded within the national curriculum.

With no apparent sense of irony, given everything that we have already touched upon, the Report’s authors generously qualify the recommendation thus:

This should be done without risking curriculum overload.

This recommendation is repeated towards the end of the Report.

Science

I suppose it was inevitable that this area of the curriculum would also fall prey to the climate crisis narrative. In fairness, this seems a more appropriate area to teach children about climate change than, say, under the citizenship heading:

As set out previously, climate change is a significant challenge that affects many aspects of modern life, and young people have been clear in their desire to see an explicit focus on climate education. Climate science is also critical to supporting the wider economy, with the growth of the green economy expected to double the number of STEM jobs in the UK. 325 The Science curriculum currently makes only limited reference to climate science and scientific work to combat climate change, and some content in the Programme of Study is outdated. This should be addressed. Giving appropriate attention to climate science should empower young people to understand the scientific causes of, consequences of, and potential solutions to climate change. Achieving this requires a coordinated approach across scientific disciplines, ensuring that environmental and climate-related content is integrated meaningfully and coherently rather than only being presented as a standalone topic.

After this justification, we find the following recommendation:

We recommend that the Government…Ensures that, in relevant areas, the Science curriculum explicitly develops students’ understanding of the scientific principles that explain climate change and sustainability and the global efforts to tackle them…

This recommendation is repeated towards the end of the Report.

I suppose I should be pleased at the reference to global efforts, since students ought to be taught that the UK’s territorial emissions are too insignificant to make any difference to “climate change”. But will they also be taught that after 30 COPs to date, global emissions just keep rising?

As a final thought, I note that the Report’s tag-line is “Building a world-class curriculum for all”. It seems that even the Government’s hubris (“UK shows international leadership in tackling climate crisis”) has found its way into the Report. Things can only get worse.

10 Comments

  1. Here’s what the AI has to say about “crisis”:

    In Greek drama, a crisis refers to a decisive turning point in the narrative, often leading to a moment of conflict or decision that significantly impacts the characters and the unfolding of the plot. This concept is closely tied to the themes of judgment and choice, reflecting the Greek word “krisis,” which means to separate or decide.

    Perhaps we could begin with Greek drama. Then we could ask why a crisis has to be a permanent feature of all life these days, rather than taking a couple of minutes on a stage.

    Also, there is not room in the curriculum for all this – there is not room for all the geography that could be usefully learnt and that pertains to climate change (in contrast to the fictional “crisis”). The most recent Ice Age, for example, and our former land bridge to the mainland of Europe.

    If we teach children about the proposed solutions to climate change, we will have to lie to them, because they are nothing of the kind. This will be pure propaganda for wind turbines, with no nuance, and no mention of the dead birds.

    We could also usefully teach them about how hypocritical people are at times, and how the pursuit of fake virtue has overtaken the pursuit of real virtue, thanks in no small part to the “climate crisis.”

    And finally, that it would take a certain bravery for any of them to argue against the indoctrination they have just received, and that it is possible to be right, and wrong at the same time.

    Liked by 2 people

  2. I am of the opinion that the education sytem in the Uk is failing many pupils in basic subjects let alone adding a subject with many complications and uncertanties (in addition to the political use of the term).There appears to be a poor grasp of the need for traditional jobs and rather too much emphesis on everyone being in cyber security or coding to run the country.

    I have a family member who is what we would all call a truant officer but is now dressed up in fancy language to pupil support manager. it takes her and a team of three to keep a lid on all the problems caused by family breakdown, entitled pupils and parents general apathy et al.

    Pupil absence is chased mainly because as the school is an academy it needs bums on seats in order to get its money each day, so it appears to me that the kids are little more than a financial instrument for the owners.

    But I digress, I have asked there is any mention of the ‘climate issue’ in their curriculum but it would seem not and my contention that the advance of technology and the effect of the uncontrolled increase in the ‘irregualar ‘incomers to the UK will have more impact on jobs than what the planet does falls on deaf ears.

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  3. Indoctrination. Indoctrination. Indoctrination.

    As a climate crisis denier, I find this not only profoundly depressing, but banally evil. Not content with ‘owning the science’, they want to own our children’s minds too, by embedding their warped ideological eco-Marxist pseudoscience and ‘sustainable crisis management’ agenda within the entire national curriculum, to be transferred wholesale into the brains of our impressionable youth.

    As a hard-bitten climate crisis denier, if you’re not downtrodden, depressed and demoralised at this point, thinking of just giving up in the face of insurmountable evil, if you still have the spiritual and intellectual reserves to carry on spreading ‘misinformation’ and ‘disinformation’, then know that the government is watching you and sooner or later they will be sending 11 police officers around to arrest you, accuse you of malicious communications/hate speech or whatever and put you before a single regime judge, having denied you the right to a jury of your peers.

    https://x.com/RupertLowe10/status/1995949624079569092

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Mark – thanks as usual for your thought provoking post. I have know for years that this has been happening in schools & University. Most people I know under 30ish have this message rammed into them from an early age & they “talk the talk”. But guess what, they still want shiny things & lots of hols abroad.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. dfhunter,

    The alarming thing is that it seems they aren’t content with the level of indoctrination that has been taking place relatively informally within nurseries, schools and universities for many years already. Now the “climate crisis” has to be embedded in the curriculum. I find it all deeply disturbing. The very use of the words “climate crisis” is political – this isn’t about science, education, teaching children how to think – it’s about indoctrinating them as to what they must think.

    It also reinforces my view that with the demise of Christianity (which I have no problem with – I’m an atheist) – something has had to fill the gap. And the “climate crisis” narrative is the gap filler. Meet the new religion. It is a religion, and it operates today in much the same way as Christianity did in the Middle Ages. In those days, Christianity permeated every aspect of life. You were legally obliged to attend Church. People often reckoned the days not by the date, but by which Saint’s Day (or Eve) it was. You couldn’t stir without Christianity permeating your daily activities and your life generally. That’s how it is with the “climate crisis” today. Switch on BBC Radio 4 and I’d be surprised if it takes much more than 5 minutes before you hear someone banging on about climate change. Read news articles on a mainstream media website, and climate change will be shoehorned into a fair few of them. Hear a politician speak, and there’s a good chance that net zero will rear its ugly head.

    We also see the same approach now as we did back then with regard to religion. In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, you didn’t have to be an atheist to be burned at the stake, you just had to be the wrong sort of Christian. Today, you don’t even have to question climate science to be labelled a climate denier – merely querying the wisdom of the policy response will be enough to see you labelled thus. At least today the burning at the stake is metaphorical rather than real, but the verbal assaults on non-believers are nevertheless pretty brutal.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. “British pupils told Taiwan is part of China

    State-funded teaching material parrots Beijing’s propaganda on breakaway province, say critics”

    https://archive.ph/OiFvJ#selection-3005.4-3009.98

    British pupils are being told that Taiwan is part of China as part of a government-funded scheme.

    Teaching material available to English secondary schools as part of the Mandarin Excellence Programme repeatedly suggests that Taiwan belongs to the People’s Republic of China….

    ...About 8,000 British pupils in 75 state secondary schools are currently enrolled on the programme, which was set up in 2016 to teach the Chinese language to British schoolchildren. Telegraph analysis of its lessons found that most mentions of Taiwan suggested to pupils that the region belonged to mainland China, including maps and study sheets.

    One exercise drawn up in 2022 for Year 8 pupils, which specifically states that it is for the Mandarin Excellence Programme, asks students: “Where is Taiwan? Do you know Taiwan is part of China?

    Sources claimed the lesson content was not mandatory and that there was no suggestion all pupils on the programme had been taught using this material....

    I suppose it depends how this information is presented. Historically, Taiwan/Formosa was part of China but to claim that it is so today is politically contentious. I wonder how the information is presented and whether the full story is being told. Is the course truly non-political and aimed purely at language education, or is it a means of propaganda for the Chinese Communist Party? I don’t know.

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  7. Mark, the indoctrination of children by the state education system re. Taiwan is overtly political, but the indoctrination of kids to believe in a mythical ‘climate crisis’ which needs fixing by means of renewables and grid infrastructure made in China (because energy is much cheaper there) is a new religion? Cui bono in either instance? The Chinese Communist Party. Of course, it’s a complete coincidence that the Labour government has disposed of militarily strategic British territory to a CCP ally, collapsed a trial of two people accused of spying for China and has granted planning permission for a huge CCP spy embassy embedded in the heart of London, directly on top of vital intelligence communication network cables. It’s also a coincidence no doubt that the British government appears to be slavishly following the CCP’s digital prison/social credit system by rushing headlong into mass facial recognition surveillance and compulsory digital ID. How long before pupils are taught in school that GB is part of China?

    Trump was pointing out years ago that the Paris Climate Accord allowed Chinese industry to unfairly compete with Western industry by limiting emissions in the West but allowing China to continue building coal-fired power stations. What’s happened since Paris? British and German manufacturing and heavy industries have been devastated by Green ideology, at the same time as manufacturing has been outsourced to China and other countries, meaning far greater dependence upon Chinese and foreign imports in order to keep going what is left of our failing economies. But Mad Red Ed insists that wind and solar are ‘homegrown’ and will decrease our reliance upon foreign dictators, as well as reduce energy prices. You might be forgiven for thinking that the ‘clean energy transition’ is in fact a transition to Chinese communism and that the Starmer/Reeves/Miliband tripartite economic regime amounts to nothing more or less than Big Lies in Little China.

    Liked by 2 people

  8. Jaime, I like your “Big Lies in Little China” … but not in a good way as far as ordinary British folk are concerned. Regards, John C.

    Like

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