Abstract

It is urgent that educators in social studies and science (among other disciplines) consider the ethical imperative of teaching the climate crisis—the future is at stake. This article considers a barrier to teaching this contentious topic effectively: existential threat. Through the lens of terror management theory, it becomes clear that climate catastrophe is an understandably fraught topic as it can serve as a reminder of death in two ways. As will be explained in this article, simultaneously such discussions can elicit not only mortality salience from considering the necrocene produced by climate catastrophe, but also existential anxiety arising from worldview threat. This threat can occur when Western assumptions are called into question as well as when there is disagreement between those with any worldviews that differ. After summarizing relevant aspects of terror management theory and analyzing the teaching of the climate crisis as an existential affair, specific strategies to help manage this situation (in and out of the classroom) are explored: providing conceptual tools, narrating cascading emotions, carefully using humor to diffuse anxiety, employing language and phrasing that does not overgeneralize divergent groups, and priming ideas of tolerance and even nurturance of difference.

Highlights

  • Mass extinctions, ocean acidification, declining air quality, rising tides, more frequent catastrophic storms, and other manifestations of climate catastrophe are direct threats to many entities, including humans

  • Through the lens of terror management theory, it becomes clear that climate catastrophe is an understandably fraught topic as it can serve as a reminder of death in two ways

  • As will be explained in this article, simultaneously such discussions can elicit mortality salience from considering the necrocene produced by climate catastrophe, and existential anxiety arising from worldview threat

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Summary

Cathryn van Kessel*

Article Info Received: April 6, 2020 Revised: April 30, 2020 Accepted: May 16, 2020. Journal of Curriculum Studies Research, 2(1), 129145.

INTRODUCTION
THE EMOTIONAL TERRAIN OF TEACHING THE CLIMATE CRISIS
TERROR MANAGEMENT THEORY
Mortality Salience
Worldview Threat
THE CLIMATE CRISIS AND EXISTENTIAL THREAT
Mortality Salience and the Climate Crisis
Worldview Threat and Western Culture
Worldview Threat and Diverging Perspectives
Defensive Moves
Pedagogical Strategies
Providing Conceptual Tools
Narrating Cascading Emotions
Employing Humor Carefully
Refraining from Overgeneralization
Priming the Idea of Tolerance
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