Action and anxiety in schools

|
school strike
Flickr
91 percent of students surveyed would like to see their school doing more to engage with issues around climate breakdown.

-

Half of teachers feel ill-equipped to deal with student anxiety around climate change, according to new research from environmental charity Global Action Plan

Climate-anxiety is proving to be a key challenge in today’s in school environment, adding to the stress levels of teenagers and teachers who feel ill-equipped to help their students. 

In the UK, as many as one in six young people will experience an anxiety condition at some point in their lives.  An existential threat such as climate change can only heighten this anxiety.

Anxiety

Sam Tarca, head of year nine in Trinity Church of England School, Lewisham said: “Over the past few years climate change has increasingly brought a sense of anxiety. With the current crises being experienced throughout the world, you just need to look at the uncontrollable bushfires ravaging Australia - the impact is finally being seen as ‘real’.

"Increasingly, students are wanting to help but not sure how and this leaves them confused and anxious”

How can schools respond to this? 40 percent of the teachers surveyed feel that their senior leadership team is not engaging in climate change as an issue.

Teachers can find themselves trapped in a cycle of inaction, as they have a lack of knowledge on how to respond and limited resources (or training) to help them discuss the issue with their students.  With so many teachers feeling ill-prepared to deal with eco-anxiety this can lead to paralysis and a feeling that the subject is just too tough to tackle.

This lack of action by schools compounds the problem and creates a cycle of anxiety among young people, who feel this critical issue is not seen as important by their schools. 

91 percent of the students surveyed would like to see their school doing more to engage with them about the issues around climate change.

Action

Now help is at hand, with teachers being offered a solution in the shape of a new campaign called Turning anxiety into action from online teacher resource hub, Transform Our World.

Hub coordinators Global Action Plan, working with a specialist psychologist, have designed an Introductory Guide called Turning anxiety into action, which will be hosted on the Transform Our World site. The Guide is for teachers to help them manage student eco-anxiety and to facilitate conversations about climate action engagement with school leaders.

Luke Wynne, Head of Youth and Schools at Global Action Plan said: “We work closely with teachers and have listened to what they are telling us – that they are worried and unsure of how to respond to climate anxiety.

"We’ve worked with partners across the Transform Our World hub to both design and curate a collection of resources to help teachers feel resilient and ready for the challenges ahead.“

The Transform Our World online teacher hub has been launched with support from the #iwill Fund to help achieve the #iwill campaign’s goal of making youth social action the norm for as many young people as possible. It empowers young people to tackle the root causes of the climate breakdown and biodiversity loss through social action.   

With the next climate strike scheduled for Friday 14 February, now is the time to make sure teachers feel equipped.

Resources

Commenting on the launch of this guide, Dr Elly Hanson Clinical Psychologist said: “So many of us, children and adults, are feeling understandably anxious about climate change.

"The key is supporting and empowering one another so that we can harness our feelings about the crisis in a way which leads to positive action. This excellent new guide will help teachers raise the issue with young people such that they can channel their anxiety and prevent it becoming entrenched or paralysing. I hugely welcome it!”

The Transform Our World hub provides free resources which are picked and rated by teachers to most effectively empower young people to tackle the root causes of our climate and ecological crises. 

It inspires students to lead impactful projects that benefit their friends, family and local area, as well as the wider world. The resources are sourced from a range of partner organisations that are expert in inspiring young people to protect the natural world through schools’ programmes.

Luke Wynne of Global Action Plan says “51 percent of teachers we spoke to agreed that there isn’t space in the curriculum for climate change as an issue. Campaigns like Teach The Future are calling for the educational system to be urgently re-purposed around the climate emergency and ecological crisis. And New Zealand and Italy are paving the way.

"It is time we made more space in the school day for students to discuss these complex and anxiety-inducing issues”

This Article 

This article is based on a press release from Global Action Plan.

Image: Julian Meehan, Flickr. 

More from this author