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Climate change for kids – Best global warming teaching resources

Learn all about Greta Thunberg, Extinction Rebellion, the climate crisis protests, carbon emissions and more with these worksheets, lesson plans and other resources for primary pupils…

Teachwire
by Teachwire
Climate change KS2 resource
DOWNLOAD A FREE RESOURCE! Climate change KS2 – Scheme of work & experiments
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KS1 climate change lesson plan

With a mixture of discussions and hands-on fun, use this KS1 climate change lesson to introduce children to the wonderful world of renewable energy. Watch as they come up with their own magical ideas to help the environment.


KS2 climate change activities

This KS2 climate change lesson plan invites children to investigate stories of change from past to present as a stepping stone to creating their own stories about the kind of future they want.


Greta Thunberg and climate change reading comprehension worksheets

Less than a year after her first protest, Greta Thunberg has become one of the most famous climate activists in the world, speaking to world leaders and helping to convince them that laws needed to change.

This resource includes a 5-page factsheet on Greta and her role in climate action, as well as a 12-question worksheet for pupils to test their comprehension skills.

You can get it all here.


Climate change assembly

This climate change assembly from fuel poverty and climate charity, Centre for Sustainable Energy, takes about 30 minutes to deliver. It covers climate change, how it affects humans and animals and how young people can take action.

There are also free, adaptable climate change lesson resources from the Centre for Sustainable Energy that will help you teach this important subject in primary school.


Greta Thunberg and climate protests

This free resource includes a feature that looks at the global climate change action that took place on the International Day of Peace, this 21 September.

Your pupils will find out all about the International Day of Peace and what its aims are, as well as how peace is affected by climate change, what the UN is doing about it and how young people like themselves can get involved.

Then, there are four activities they can do: debating schools strikes, writing a five-point instructional plan urging world leaders to make climate change an essential issue, creating clever slogans to go on protest signs and looking into a recent event where extreme weather meant people had to leave their homes.


Protest pollution, fossil fuels and greenhouse gas with this art lesson plan

Show your class how to express what they feel passionate about in an artistic way, with Jasmine Smail’s art and PSHE lesson plan.

Protests have been at the centre of political and social change for centuries and, with the recent climate strikes, they are more relevant than ever for young people. The art world is far from exempt from activism.

Protest or activist art is a term used to describe work addressing political or social issues, often with the intention of provoking action or change.

Exploring the activist, contemporary artist and writer Patrick Brill, known under his pseudonym Bob and Roberta Smith, is a perfect way to introduce your class to activist art.

Get this resource here.


Free ebook resource

Schools can download a free ebook called Children For Change from November 2024. It features contributions from 80+ leading names in the UK children’s author community, including Liz Pichon, Charlie Higson, Axel Scheffler, Joseph Coelho and more. It aims to inspire the next generation to change their future.

The ebook covers KS2 curriculum topics including the causes, impacts and effects of climate change on the environment, weather patterns, biodiversity, heatwaves, renewable energy and sustainable practices.


Five simple ways to reduce your carbon footprint

We can all play our part in fighting climate change, working together and being more aware of how our actions affect the amazing world we live in. If we each take small steps it will make a big difference.

This PDF from Wicked Weather Watch offers five simple ways to reduce our carbon footprint, and some extra ideas to take it further in school or at home.

Get it here.


Climate change KS2 scheme of work

Wicked Weather Watch has also produced this KS2 scheme of work, which can be used as a complete resource over six (or more) weeks, or individual activities within it can be used on their own, or to support teaching other themes or subjects.

This download PDF provides an overview of the scheme, and you can download 26 individual resources for free on the Wicked Weather Watch website here.

KS2 Themes

  • Explorers/invaders
  • Cold environments
  • Living on an island/island life
  • Europe
  • North America

Lead subject: Geography

Other subjects: English/literacy, drama, art, music, science, computing, D&T

Get this resource here.


WWF climate change activities for kids

The World Wildlife Fund has produced a range of curriculum-linked resources for the classroom to help your pupils explore the issues of climate change in an engaging and motivating way.

There’s Shaping our Future, which gives an introduction to climate change and what it is; Ends of the Earth, which looks at the poles; and for getting involved with WWF events there’s Earth Hour and Green Ambassadors.

Check them all out here.


How plastics affect animals and the environment

This resource introduces children to the effects of plastic bags on animals in the ocean, discussing how traditional plastic bags can stay around for 1,000 years.

It also looks at what alternatives we have for a greener future.

This PDF resource includes an article about plastic bags and their effect on animals and the environment, as well as accompanying activity ideas:

Get this resource here.


Climate change facts for kids – lessons and PowerPoint

In this suite of lessons from Young People’s Trust for the Environment, KS2 (or 3) students will learn:

  • What is climate change?
  • What impacts is climate change having around the world?
  • How are humans causing climate change?
  • What can we all do to stop climate change?

As well as extensive notes and suggestions for classroom activities, this lesson plan suite also includes detailed instructions for a simple, but highly effective and engaging experiment that can be carried out using simple equipment in the classroom to show how increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere are contributing to rising global temperatures.

Also included is a spreadsheet that students can populate with their own data from the experiment and visualise on a graph, an energy efficiency quiz and a PowerPoint Presentation.

Download all this here.


Polar bears, glaciers and climate change worksheet

This activity pack contains a selection of resources based on the theme of polar bears and climate change, including a ‘Grolar bear or pizzly?’ info sheet and a polar bear quiz.

You can download it here.


Teaching children about Earth’s climate with hope

The best way to respond when children are scared is to offer reassurance, says Alex Standish, so our role as teachers is to encourage a more balanced narrative.

In this article he explains how you can teach climate change while presenting hope for our children’s futures and empower them to create a positive change.

Read his ideas here.


Climate change geography activities

This activity pack from Wicked Weather Watch contains a selection of resources based on the theme of climate change.

  • ‘What is climate change?’ PowerPoint
  • Awesome Arctic experiments: Less snow and ice means a warmer world
  • Awesome Arctic experiments: Rising sea levels
  • Awesome Arctic experiments: Ocean currents and climate change
  • Greenland climate changes infographic

Get this resource here.


Amazon forest fires

This resource looks at the devastating fires in the Amazon rainforest, and the global protests that are taking place to ensure their protection.

Students will learn what caused the fires, how many fires there have been, why this is so important, how the world has reacted and how Brazil has responded.

This PDF resource includes this article, as well as accompanying activity ideas:

  • Hold a debate on whether other nations have a say in how these fires are dealt with, or whether it should be up to Brazil alone.
  • Write an imaginary account of the fires from the perspective of an animal living in the rainforest
  • Write a poem using the metaphor of the Amazon rainforest being the lungs of the world
  • Investigate how much oxygen the Amazon rainforest produces, and how this happens

Get this resource here.


Fairtrade Fortnight

Fairtrade Foundation has developed a set of resources focusing on something many of us start our mornings with – tea.

They tell the story of how tea growers in Kenya are adapting to a changing climate while improving the sustainability of their farms, thanks to Fairtrade.

Download it here.


Extreme weather events and rising sea levels in the UK

Of course, it’s not just climates with extreme hot and cold weather that are affected by global warming. This activity pack contains two resources based on the theme of the climate change in the UK.

  • Impact of the UK on climate change (activity)
  • How the UK is linked to the Arctic (info sheet)

Get them both here.


Climate science, air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions

Recently updated, Oxfam’s Climate Challenge resources use engaging tools and activities to explore the causes and human impact of climate change, and consider what action can be taken in response.

Investigate the greenhouse effect and analyse carbon footprint data, and use a ‘consequence wheel’, case studies and roleplay to learn about how communities are being affected by climate change and how people are responding and adapting to these challenges.

Download it all here.


Life without electricity science resource

This PDF resource includes an article about a power cut that affected 1,000,000 people in England and Wales, the biggest in a decade, as well as accompanying activity ideas:

  • Hold a debate on our reliance on electricity and whether we should be forced to go without electrical appliances for two hours each day
  • Discuss whether the climate emergency is so bad that individual rights to using electrical items should be overridden
  • Write an acrostic poem about being stuck at a railway station because of a power cut, or instructions on what to do in the event of a power cut
  • Investigate how much power you use by keeping a mini-diary of all your activities that require electricity

Get this resource here.


Browse more resources for World Environment Day. Read about how maths plays an important part in teaching climate change.

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