On Thursday, President Trumps decision to withdraw from a landmark global climate agreement touched off a new round of combustible debate. But here in Idaho, Esler (The teacher) has managed to nurture a growing cadre of budding environmentalists by eschewing politics and focusing on tangible changes in the natural landscape, changes that affect the crystalline water, the ancient trees, the once-abundant snow.
Esler prods students to investigate and reach their own conclusions about peoples impact on the environment. Instead of lecturing about the perils of warmer winters, he takes his class into the surrounding Bitterroot Mountains to measure declining snowpack. Instead of telling them to use energy-efficient LED lightbulbs, he has them test the efficiency of four varieties and then write about which they prefer and why.
On the trip to Farragut State Park, students take pencil-thin core samples from their trees. They count the rings to get the trees age, then do some math to determine how much carbon the tree pulls out of the atmosphere through photosynthesis.
We could do this in the classroom, Esler said. I could just give them the numbers and show them a PowerPoint. But now I have kids smelling the inside of a tree. Thats a tangible connection. . . . I hope it makes them think about what happens to that carbon when it comes out of their tail pipe.
After learning about the persistence of plastic in the environment, Lenna Reardon talked her boss at the local ice cream parlor into installing a recycling bin. Connor Brookss family now composts. Jordan Lo, the vice president of the Environmental Club, is on a crusade to get his classmates to ditch bottled water for reusable containers.
Most of Eslers students say they rarely thought about climate change before taking his class. Craig Cooper, a state water researcher who leads a local climate action group, admits that outreach is a problem.
The single biggest failure of the climate movement is that it hasnt done a good enough job building relationships, Cooper said. To most people, climate change is a political argument they dont want to get into.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nati...f64b4fe2dfc_story.html?utm_term=.5829d2883af0