Coping with Climate Anxiety in the Classroom and for Yourself: a Workshop for College & University Faculty
The Worry & Hope study at the University of Hawaii revealed a pervasive emotional climate of fear, anger, sadness, shame and hope about climate change. College faculty already knew this, and are, themselves, feeling anxiety, grief, and additional stress that accompanies a sense of urgency and responsibility to teach and engage with students about climate change across all academic subject areas.
This two hour workshop is for faculty to address their own emotions so that we can create and hold space in our classrooms for students to integrate and process hard realities about climate change impacts. If not here, where? If not us, who? A short overview of research on climate change education and pedagogies will be followed by experiential workshop going through 4 activities that you can then use in your classroom. The activities are based on recent research as well as ecotherapy, ecopsychology, and the Active Hope work of Joanna Macy.
Thursday, August 6
3-4:30 pm Eastern Standard Time
Online, via Zoom
Cost: Free to College & University affiliated faculty
Please register by August 5. A Zoom link, some view-ahead materials, and technology requirements will be forward to registered participants. Video connectivity is required, and participants must attend the entire 2 hour workshop to preserve the interactive online engagement.