The Climate Change Education Act returns to the House of Representatives again

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The Climate Change Education Act is again in the House of Representatives. H.R. 2310, introduced on April 1, 2021, would authorize the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to institute a competitive grant program aimed in part at developing and improving educational material and teacher training on the topic of climate change.

Among the findings listed in the bill are "[T]he evidence for human-induced climate change is overwhelming and undeniable" and "Only 30 percent of middle school and 45 percent of high school science teachers understand the extent of the scientific consensus on climate change" — a reference to the NCSE/Penn State survey of climate change educators (PDF).

NCSE's Executive Director Ann Reid commented, "The Climate Change Education Act addresses a critically important need. Teachers urgently need and want support to cover climate change accurately and effectively. Federal funding to support the development of high-quality evidence-based teaching resources ultimately will benefit millions of students."

H.R. 2310 is sponsored by Debbie Dingell (D-Michigan 12) and twelve of her colleagues in the House. The bill is identical to S. 966, sponsored by Edward J. Markey (D-Massachusetts); Markey previously introduced the bill in 2019, as S. 477, and in 2018, as S. 2740, as well as a similar measure, SA 2175 to S. 1177, in 2015.

Glenn Branch
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Glenn Branch is Deputy Director of NCSE.

branch@ncse.ngo