Broadening Participation in Undergraduate Climate Education 2023
Past Event: SENCER West Coast Regional Meeting, Sept. 14鈥15, 2023
Sponsored by The Hixon Center for Climate and the Environment and the Office of Community and Civic Engagement
The world is on track for at least a 2鈩 global average temperature increase by 2100 based on international agreements, pledges, and targets鈥攁nd even optimistic scenarios of current pledges result in an estimated 1.8C of , all despite the 2015 Paris agreement goal of keeping the global average temperature increase below 1.5鈩. The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has released their sixth Assessment Report describing the impacts of warming beyond 1.5鈩, which will touch every aspect of our lives. And yet K-12 education is only just beginning to adopt climate literacy into its standard curricula, and the , is lagging.听
Despite these shortcomings, there is a growing effort to expand climate education in higher education and to incorporate climate beyond the earth sciences. Faculty understand that, regardless of field, our graduates will inherit a personal and professional landscape that is fundamentally changed from the world today. Their education should prepare them for this new world.
This one-day conference convened climate experts, teacher-scholars from other disciplines and community partners to discuss the future of climate education for undergraduates.听The goal of the conference is to expand the number of faculty involved in climate education and for those already involved to deepen their understanding of and appreciation for the strengths that multiple perspectives bring to addressing the challenges of climate.听A theme throughout the conference was broadening participation in climate education on our campuses and in our communities.
Conference Keynote Speakers and Facilitators

V. Ram Ramanathan
University of California at San Diego and Cornell University
V. Ram Ramanathan is emeritus professor at the University of California at San Diego and Cornell University Climate Solutions Scholar at the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Cornell University. He is the founding chair of University of California鈥檚 Bending the Curve: Climate Education For All, a multi-disciplinary undergraduate curriculum on climate change solutions taught at many campuses around the world. Ramanathan discovered the greenhouse effect of chlorofluorocarbons and other heat trapping pollutant gases. His findings on super pollutants (methane, HFCs, ozone and black carbon) have led to several successful climate mitigation actions worldwide, including the formation of Climate and Clean Air Coalition by the United Nations to mitigate these pollutants. He was the founding chair of University of California鈥檚 Bending the Curve: Climate solutions education protocol and taught at many campuses around the world. He served as the science advisor for Pope Francis鈥 Holy See delegation to the UN鈥檚 2015 Paris Climate Conference. He was listed as Foreign Policy Magazine鈥檚听 , named 2013 Champion of Earth by the United Nations and was awarded the 2021 Blue Planet Prize.听He is an elected member to the US National Academy of Sciences, the Pontifical Academy of Science (council member), The American Philosophical Society and the Royal Swedish Academy of Science.

Crystal Chissell
Executive Director, Global Council for Science and the Environment
Crystal Chissell is the executive director of the Global Council for Science and the Environment (GCSE). Prior to joining GCSE, Chissell served as vice president of operations for two climate solutions nonprofits, Project Drawdown and Project Regeneration and also served as senior director of partnerships for Project Drawdown. In those roles she has worked with government, business and academic organizations to identify, analyze and implement a diverse portfolio of effective strategies for reversing climate change from local to global scales. Her state and local government experience includes serving as chief solicitor of the Baltimore City Law Department and assistant attorney general for the Maryland Environmental Service.听Chissell earned a B.A. from Howard University, an M.S. in environmental science from Johns Hopkins University, an MBA from the University of San Francisco and a J.D. from the University of Maryland School of Law.

Mark Stemen
California State University, Chico
Mark Stemen is a professor of environmental studies at California State University, Chico, where he teaches courses in sustainability and civic engagement. Known to his students as 鈥淒r. Mark,鈥 he is well-recognized on the campus for his work with students and the community on issues of sustainability and climate change. He and his students recently assisted in preparing a climate vulnerability assessment for the city of Chico and Butte County that will allow them to integrate future climate scenarios into their respective general plans.听In 2008, Stemen was named 鈥淪ustainability Champion鈥 at the seventh annual California Higher Education Sustainability Conference, and he is a co-founder (with his students) of the at CSU, Chico. In spring 2022, Stemen facilitated the inaugural CSU (FLC in TCCR). With participation from 62 faculty from six CSU campuses representing over 30 disciplines, the FLC ultimately redesigned 75 classes to offer greater engagement in climate change. The FLC was awarded the by the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education and was highlighted in the , as part of their Future Trends in Higher Education for 2023.听Stemen will host the FLC in TCCR again during spring 2024.

Krista Hiser
Senior Lead and Advisor for Sustainability Education
Krista is the Senior Lead and Advisor for advancing Sustainability Education and the Key Competencies Framework. In听her听role she works with partners at Arizona State University, and GCSE鈥檚 Sustainability Education Community of Practice, as well as stakeholders across higher education. She has been Senior Fellow for Community Colleges at GCSE since 2018. Formerly the director of the University of Hawai驶i System Center for Sustainability Across the Curriculum, she is on professional leave from Kapi驶olani Community College, where she听is a听Professor of Composition & Rhetoric with an emphasis on sustainability curriculum, climate change education, and community resilience.听She received her doctoral听degree in Educational Administration听from the University of Hawaii at M膩noa, and听holds a master鈥檚 degree听in English Composition from San Francisco State University and a bachelor鈥檚 in English from the University of Iowa.
Information and Resources from Presenters and Attendees
Climate in Any Course you Teach
Prof. Mark Stemen, California State University, Chico
This session gave attendees an opportunity to make progress toward inclusion of climate topics in their existing courses. Prof. Stemen recommends the following resources for anyone interested in adding climate to their courses:
- , from Krista Hiser
You may also wish to review the resources under (a Faculty Learning Community) as well as the .
Resources from attendees
Many attendees shared their favorite resource(s) related to climate education. Here is a selection of those resources:
- . (2018). 鈥淭he Community College Green Genome Framework: Integrating Sustainability and Clean Technology Workforce Development Into an Institution鈥檚 DNA. A National Guide and Institutional Self-assessment Created by Community Colleges, For Community Colleges.
- An abbreviated description of Dr. Peter Friederici鈥檚 framework for thinking about how story framings affect our understanding of the climate crisis.
- (a work in progress) provided by Alexis L. Mraz
- , Doucette, Morrison, Price, and Shaver
- and the
- Climate-related hazards are affecting U.S. communities every day. View real-time statistics and maps documenting where people, property, and infrastructure may be exposed to hazards. 听
- Readout of the , March 2023
Contact Details
For听more information, please reach out to the organizers at climateeducation-l@g.hmc.edu. Conference organizers are Lelia Hawkins, director of the Hixon Center for Climate and the Environment; Karl Haushalter, chair, Department of Chemistry; and Gabriela Gamiz, director of civic and community engagement.
Meet the Climate Education Conference Co-Sponsors
无忧视频鈥檚 Hixon Center for Climate and the Environment
The Hixon Center for Climate and the Environment is the home for all campus efforts related to climate, sustainability, and environmental studies, including course development, faculty-led scholarship, and special events.
To address the multifaceted challenges presented by our changing climate, the center is actively recruiting faculty for joint appointments across all departments. This will ensure our program is reflective of the interdisciplinary nature of the climate crisis. Regardless of a student鈥檚 aligned discipline, they will find an avenue to apply their passion and make an impact on society.听
Read and learn more about the Hixon Center here.
无忧视频鈥檚 Office of Civic and Community Engagement
The Office of Civic and Community Engagement (OCCE) works collectively with our campus and the broader community to educate and empower one another to be informed and engaged members of a community that makes meaningful contributions to society.
OCCE encourages the campus community to develop mutually meaningful and reciprocally enriching relationships with communities both locally and globally. OCCE achieves this by supporting students, faculty and staff with advice and guidance; community partnership communication; logistical and transportation resources; and funding for projects and (co)-curricular (re)design.
Read and learn more about OCCE here.
National Center for Science & Civic Engagement鈥檚 (NCSCE鈥檚) Science Education for New Civic Engagement and Responsibilities (SENCER)
NCSCE is a national organization that supports a community of educators throughout the 无忧视频 learning ecosystem, from K-12 and undergraduate education, to 鈥渇ree-choice鈥 and informal education. Through professional development programs they support cross-sector collaboration, curriculum and course design, assessment, research, and mentoring. They help educators in and outside the classroom make connections between the content they teach and real world issues of civic importance. Their goal is to听 empower learners by showing them that 无忧视频 education is civic education; and what we learn today can help solve some of the biggest problems of tomorrow.听Read and learn more about .
SENCER is NCSCE鈥檚 signature program. SENCER courses and programs strengthen student learning and interest in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (无忧视频) by connecting course topics to issues of critical local, national, and global importance.
Students and faculty report that the SENCER approach makes science more real, accessible, 鈥渦seful,鈥 and civically important.听For history, resources, the SENCER Course Model Series, and lots more go to .