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Climate Denial: How language is used to misinform

Overview

Overview

As a high school Humanities teacher in English or Communications, you can use this set of computer-based tools to help you teach students persuasive language techniques. It focuses on language techniques used in climate communication, specifically how climate misinformation has been used by a range of actors to confuse the public in order to stymie effective action on climate change.

This lesson plan uses a game titled ‘Cranky Uncle’ developed by John Cook, Monash University to help students develop critical thinking skills and equip them with skills in language analyses and techniques.

Students will be introduced to the five techniques within the FLICC Framework (Fake Experts, Logical Fallacies, Impossible Expectations, Conspiracy Theories, Cherry Picking), Climate myth examples and Climate denialism

Thus, the use of this lesson plan allows you to integrate the teaching of a climate science topic with a core topic in the Humanities.

As a high school Humanities teacher in English or Communications, you can use this set of computer-based tools to help you teach students persuasive language techniques. It focuses on language techniques used in climate communication, specifically how climate misinformation has been used by a range of actors to confuse the public in order to stymie effective action on climate change.

This lesson plan uses a game titled ‘Cranky Uncle’ developed by John Cook, Monash University to help students develop critical thinking skills and equip them with skills in language analyses and techniques.

Students will be introduced to the five techniques within the FLICC Framework (Fake Experts, Logical Fallacies, Impossible Expectations, Conspiracy Theories, Cherry Picking), Climate myth examples and Climate denialism

Thus, the use of this lesson plan allows you to integrate the teaching of a climate science topic with a core topic in the Humanities.

Curriculum Code (Australia)

1 ACELA1567 Understand how paragraphs and images can be arranged for different purposes, audiences, perspectives and stylistic effects
2 ACELA1569 Analyse and evaluate the effectiveness of a wide range of sentence and clause structures as authors design and craft texts
3 ACELA1571 Refine vocabulary choices to discriminate between shades of meaning, with deliberate attention to the effect on audiences

Learning Outcome

The tools in this lesson plan will enable students to:

  1. Understand Science Denialism, specifically, Climate Denialism.
  2. Learn how climate misinformation has been used by a range of actors to confuse the public in order to stymie effective action on climate change.
  3. Identify and define the five techniques within the FLICC (Fake Experts, Logical Fallacies, Impossible Expectations, Conspiracy Theories, Cherry Picking) framework.

This is a lesson plan developed by the Monash Climate Change Communication Research Hub (MCCCRH) with contributions by Lucy Bandiera, Tess Kelly, Will McIlroy, Josh Mancusi-Thomas and Dr. John Cook.

The lesson plan originated at the “Climate Classrooms: Educational Resources for Teachers” workshop at the Australian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society (AMOS) conference held online in February 2021. The workshop was sponsored by CLEX and supported by MCCCRH, AMOS, the University of Melbourne, the UNSW Sydney, and the TROP ICSU (Trans-disciplinary Research Oriented Pedagogy for Improving Climate Studies and Understanding) project. A version of the lesson plan tailored for use in Australian classrooms is available at this link.

This is a lesson plan developed by the Monash Climate Change Communication Research Hub (MCCCRH) with contributions by Lucy Bandiera, Tess Kelly, Will McIlroy, Josh Mancusi-Thomas and Dr. John Cook.

The lesson plan originated at the “Climate Classrooms: Educational Resources for Teachers” workshop at the Australian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society (AMOS) conference held online in February 2021. The workshop was sponsored by CLEX and supported by MCCCRH, AMOS, the University of Melbourne, the UNSW Sydney, and the TROP ICSU (Trans-disciplinary Research Oriented Pedagogy for Improving Climate Studies and Understanding) project. A version of the lesson plan tailored for use in Australian classrooms is available at this link.

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