Booking options
£7.93 - £19.84
+ VAT£7.93 - £19.84
+ VATDelivered Online
1 hour 45 minutes
Join the Historical Association and the Royal Geographical Society at this special online twilight forum event specifically for primary teachers of history and geography. The theme this time will be climate education and how primary teachers can develop this through their history and geography lessons. With a keynote speaker and workshop sessions from Ailsa Fidler and Emma Espley, plus an opportunity to network and share ideas, this event will support primary teachers to better understand how history and geography can feed into the responsibility of every curriculum subject to educate our young people about the climate crisis and sustainable futures.
The forum is aimed at history and geography teachers and subject leaders in primary schools. The event will share ideas that can be adapted to support pupils at EYFS, Key Stage 1 and 2.
This event will:
support you to better understand how history and geography can feed into the responsibility of every curriculum subject to educate our young people about the climate crisis and sustainable futures
provide practical examples of how history and geography can feed into teaching about climate
There has never been a more important time to focus attention on the climate and nature crisis: leading climate scientists are warning that many of Earth’s ‘vital signs’ have hit record extremes, and a high number of students are concerned about climate change and the future. A recent report from University College London on the role of subjects in climate change and sustainability education recommended that high quality professional development about climate change and sustainability education is urgently needed for all teachers, tailored by subject and age phase and focused on subject knowledge and appropriate pedagogies. It emphasised that subject associations are particularly important role to this and highlighted the benefit of fostering communities of practice such as these as a way of building teacher capacity.
4.15–4.30 | Joining, networking and introductions |
4.30–5.00 | Keynote talk |
5.00–5.30
| Ailsa Fidler: Wangari Maathai, founder of the Green Belt movement as a significant individual: positive representation within a broad and balanced curriculum |
5.30–6.00 | Emma Espley: Thinking critically about climate change and sustainability in relation to hot and cold places (foci: the Arctic, Antarctica and Amazon rainforest) |
The course will take place using Zoom Meetings.
The registered attendee will be sent an email from the HA via Cademy with the joining information one week before the course, with a reminder the day before.
If you require assistance with your booking or would like to know more about the course, please contact events@history.org.uk.