Article
Details
Citation
Walshe N, Wale W & Rushton EAC (2026) Is climate literacy an effective proxy for climate change education? Evidence from young people¡¯s conceptualisations of climate change in England. Children's Geographies. https://doi.org/10.1080/14733285.2026.2659320
Abstract
Education, including school education, is integral to just responses to global climate change and sustainability crises. Increasingly, national and international surveys seek to assess the ¡®climate literacy' of young people, including as a mechanism to measure the effectiveness of national education systems for preparing young people. However, these surveys generally ask young people to identify accurate knowledge from a series of definitions, rather than exploring their understanding through open questions. This research analyses 2051 survey responses from students aged 11-14 years in England to the question ¡®What is climate change? Climate change is ¡¡¯. Just over half (52.5%) provided responses which broadly included ideas of change or harm to the environment and/or Earth systems, all with reference to temperature. We argue that for young people to develop a lasting and multi-dimensional understanding of climate change, climate change education must extend beyond a narrow focus on geography and science to include a greater range of disciplinary perspectives. Further, we consider whether the global movement towards the measurement of climate literacy through surveys risks underscoring a narrow, predominantly science-based understanding of climate literacy, and away from holistic conceptualisations which attend to affective dimensions, and ideas of justice and equity.
Keywords
Climate change; young people; climate literacy; climate change education
Journal
Children's Geographies
| Status | Early Online |
|---|---|
| Publication date online | 30/04/2026 |
| Date accepted by journal | 19/02/2026 |
| URL | |
| Publisher | Informa UK Limited |
| ISSN | 1473-3285 |
| eISSN | 1473-3277 |
People (1)
Professor of Education, Education