麻豆视频

Alumna writes go-to guide for teaching climate change

Ingrid Zabel 鈥87 is Climate Change Education Manager for the  (PRI), a small but mighty presence situated across Cayuga Lake from Cornell. The Ithaca-based institution is nationally recognized for its top-notch education resources about the history of life on Earth.

Zabel鈥檚 job is to make climate change science more accessible to the public, via exhibits at the Museum of the Earth and the Cayuga Nature Center, teacher resources, and education programs for youth and adults. She also curates two online portals for climate change resources in the Northeast: the  and .

In 2017, Zabel and her colleagues at PRI released  (TFGCC). Over the past two years, the book has been distributed to more than 50,000 teachers in 44 states nationwide, including every public high school science teacher in New York City and in twelve states.

The National Center for Science Education recently awarded PRI the . Ann Reid, the Executive Director of the National Center for Science Education, described the book as 鈥渢he single best available resource for teachers on climate change.鈥

Ingrid Hoffmann Zabel grew up in Ithaca, and her father, Roald Hoffmann, is Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters and a Professor Emeritus in the chemistry department. She attended Cornell as an undergraduate, graduating in 1987 with a degree in physics. Her brother, Hillel Hoffmann 鈥85, is also a Cornellian.

After Cornell, Zabel pursued a PhD in physics at Ohio State University (OSU), where she served as a postdoctoral research associate at OSU鈥檚 Byrd Polar Research Center. Zabel travelled to Greenland, where her team conducted radar studies of the ice sheet in order to provide ground-truth data for satellite-mounted radar observations.

According to Zabel, Greenland鈥檚 ice sheet is important because it locks up much of Earth鈥檚 fresh water. 鈥淚n the early 1990s, scientists knew that Earth was warming and wanted to know what was going to happen to the Greenland ice sheet. Would it shrink due to excess melting or would it grow from more snowfall?鈥

Warming temperatures melt the sea ice, causing more open water to be exposed in the Arctic Ocean. Three decades ago, scientists thought that the open water would result in more evaporation and thus more water vapor falling as snow on Greenland.  It wasn鈥檛 clear which effect would be dominant: ice sheet growth from increased snowfall or loss of ice from melting as Earth鈥檚 climate warmed.

鈥淣ow we know!鈥 she says. 鈥淭he ice sheet is definitely shrinking as a result of warming temperatures.鈥

After earning her PhD from OSU, Zabel worked at MIT鈥檚 Lincoln Lab on a radar project in Hawaii. Her next position鈥攁s mother to two children鈥攚as unpaid, and brought her home to Ithaca to be closer to her family.

She first joined PRI to assist with fundraising. Two years later, she moved into the education department.

Over the past decade, PRI has published a series of Teacher-Friendly GuidesTM, intended to provide rich content and curriculum ideas for Earth science teachers. Previous titles include the  and the regional series of .

The development of each of the guides was supported by funding from the National Science Foundation. Most recently, the TFGCC was funded by a National Science Foundation grant to Cornell climate scientist .

鈥淣atalie is a lead author on the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change assessment reports,鈥 says Zabel. 鈥淣ot only was TFGCC a logical and important addition to the teacher-friendly series, but it was also a great way to extend Natalie鈥檚 science and the science of climate change to a larger audience,鈥 she says.

鈥淚t鈥檚 wonderful to have a high-quality resource for teachers across the country to better inform their students about the challenges and opportunities of climate change,鈥 says Mahowald, the Irving Porter Church Professor of Engineering in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric 麻豆视频 at Cornell.

鈥淚 think one of the strengths of The Teacher-Friendly Guide鈩 to Climate Change is its breadth. This breadth reflects the strengths of PRI,鈥 Zabel says. 鈥淓ach of my colleagues brings different strengths and background interests, and they all came together in one book.鈥

The TFGCC team includes Zabel and six esteemed Cornell colleagues: Warren Allmon, Hunter R. Rawlings III Professor of Paleontology, Louis Derry, Professor of Earth and Atmospheric 麻豆视频, Don Haas, current Director of Teacher Programs, Natalie Mahowald, Professor of Earth and Atmospheric 麻豆视频, Alexandra Moore,Visiting Associate Professor of Earth and Atmospheric Science, Robert Ross, Associate Director for Outreach, Paleontological Research Institution.

Other Cornell partners include the , which funded TFGCC distribution to NYS teachers through a summer 2018 professional development workshop. The , formerly based at Cornell, funded instrumentation installed at the Cayuga Nature Center to teach local school children about climate change.

鈥淪ince publication of the TFGCC, we have seen study after study reinforce our belief that teachers, students, and parents support teaching and learning climate science,鈥 says Alexandra Moore, a TFGCC contributing author. She points to the Ipsos/NPR poll released on April 22, 2019 (Earth Day), , as just one example.

She explains that many teachers don鈥檛 have the resources they need to do the job well. 鈥淭he TFGCC provides teachers with high-quality climate science and helps teachers understand the issue from the perspectives of multiple disciplines,鈥 says Moore.

Zabel believes that one of the strengths of the book is the fact that it encompasses both the science of climate change alongside several chapters devoted to the social science of climate change. 鈥淚t has a chapter on regional climate change, so that teachers anywhere in the US can find something locally relevant,鈥 says Zabel. 鈥淭here are three chapters devoted to climate solutions, and I know that the chapter on Frequently-Asked Questions is really useful. Teachers, students鈥攁nd all of us, really鈥攈ave lots of questions,鈥 she says.

鈥淭o understand climate change deeply requires more than just understanding the physical science,鈥 says co-author Don Haas. 鈥淭he psychology and sociology related to climate change denial and to our difficulty in moving away from the status quo鈥攅ven when we understand the physical science鈥攁re also hugely important.鈥

鈥淲hat actually makes people, institutions, and governments change their minds and change their behaviors generally involves far more than just having facts explained. Emotions are in play. Logical fallacies and cognitive biases can easily trick people into believing things that are simply not true. We can address all of these issues more effectively with a deeper understanding of the social sciences,鈥 Haas explains.

The TFGCC provides teachers with strategies for addressing climate skepticism, should it come up in the course of their discussions about climate change. 鈥淢ost parents do want this content taught,鈥 says Haas. 鈥淭eachers need to know that resistance is relatively uncommon and that they have strategies for addressing it, should it arise,鈥 he says.

Zabel is already thinking about what to include in the second edition of the book. 鈥淭he science is always progressing,鈥 she says. 鈥淚鈥檇 like to expand the solutions chapters to talk more directly about actions that young people can take. And we are working on developing classroom and outdoor activities to accompany the book, something which we didn鈥檛 fully build out in the first edition,鈥 she adds.

Back in 2017, just as the TFGCC was going to press, the conservative Heartland Institute announced that it was sending 200,000 copies of its booklet, 鈥淲hy Scientists Disagree about Global Warming,鈥 to science teachers nationwide.

鈥淭he TFGCC authors took on the challenge of responding to Heartland with a crowdfunding campaign to counter climate change denial with actual climate science,鈥 says Moore, leader of the  at PRI. 鈥淲e need to ensure that teachers and their students have access to the best possible information.鈥

PRI is currently raising funds to send the The Teacher-Friendly Guide鈩 to Climate Change to every public high school science teacher in the US鈥攆ree of charge.

鈥淎t a cost of $2.50 per teacher, we are sending digital and print copies of the TFGCC on a school-by-school, state-by-state basis,鈥 says Moore.

The campaign has garnered national attention in  and on PBS鈥檚 , and has raised more than half of its current $250,000 goal. This is the total needed to put a book in the hands of about half of the country鈥檚 200,000 public high school science teachers.

According to Moore, teachers have responded enthusiastically, citing the book as a 鈥渕ust-have鈥 resource for teaching students about climate change.

鈥淲e have thousands of books downloaded from our website, so those individuals had to seek us out to find the resource鈥攑resumably on the recommendation of a peer,鈥 says Moore. 鈥淎nd we鈥檝e received a lot of positive feedback from teachers.鈥

Thomas Adams, principal of Hamburg Middle School in upstate New York, writes, 鈥淭here is a spirit within the work that leaves the reader hopeful and energized about the possibilities for improving present conditions and future outcomes鈥 The potential good that can come from an energized teacher imparting knowledge and optimism to a cohort is impossible to measure.鈥

With just over $113,000 to go in the campaign, one thing is certain, says Moore. 鈥淲e know that teachers can鈥檛 use the TFGCC if they don鈥檛 have it!鈥

This story originally appeared on the

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