Last month saw the launch of a new report, Climate Change and Sustainability Education in additional learning needs and alternative provision settings.
To celebrate, and to create space for dedicated discussion of this oft-neglected topic, the report’s authors – Shannon O’Connor, Dr Jennifer Rudd, Dr David Thomas, and Bryony Bromley – hosted a one-day conference at Swansea University.
The report and the discussions on the day highlighted how poorly Additional Learning Needs (ALN)i learners are catered for by the Climate Change and Sustainability Education (CCSE) community, a point also raised during the Q&A of our recent Webinar.
The CCSE community is waking up to this gap in provision, as is the BBC, and it is something we have been grappling with at Global Action Plan in recent years. We always aim to include all young people in our programmes and, simultaneously, we are regularly asked and encouraged to do so by settings, teachers, and learners. We have made a lot of progress; but we want to progress further.
O’Connor et.al. conducted qualitative interviews and questionnaires with 26 education settings in Wales, but the findings will resonate across the UK, and likely around the world. The report details four issues that require immediate attention to improve not just access to, but also the quality of, CCSE provision for ALN and SEND learners:
At Global Action Plan we are in a position to address the critical resource gap in England and Wales. We are doing this through the work we are doing with SEND and ALN specialists to adapt our existing Good Life Schools programme resources and create specific tailored new ones.
To support this, as part of our ongoing piloting and roll out of Good Life Schools, we have already worked with specialist settings in the East Midlands and the North East of England. This academic year, we will be expanding this work across England and Wales:
The learnings we are gaining from this work, add to learnings we’ve gained from engaging SEND and ALN learners in youth social action and climate change and sustainability education over the last three years as part of our wider Good Life Schools and Transform Our World programmes.
Gap 3 – insufficient staff training – is something we would like to address too. We are still a way off calling ourselves ‘experts’, but through the above work we hope to become more equipped (and resourced) to help in the role of trainer. We would like to expand our teacher education offer to give SEND and ALN specialists the tailored training they need.
Finally, through our Global Action Plan Education community, we would also love to help with gap 4 by creating and supporting the specialised networks that are so badly needed.
We encourage you to read and digest the O’Connor report, but also to respond to it. The gaps laid out in the report help create a framework from which to form a strategy around including all learners in climate change and sustainability education.
As ever we are keen to work with partners and funders to help us to do this work. Please get in touch with us at [email protected] if you would like to explore potential collaborations.
Contact
If you would like to know more about Global Action Plan Education programmes or resources, please get in touch by completing the form below.
Thank you for submitting your enquiry! We'll be back in touch with you as soon as possible.
Quick Links
All content © 2025 Global Action Plan. Global Action Plan is a charity registered in England and Wales number 1026148, and in Scotland number SC041260. Email: [email protected] Tel: 0204 566 9904
Site built with tlc