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One state mandates teaching climate change in almost all subjects – even PE

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PENNINGTON, N.J. — There was one minute left on Suzanne Horsley’s stopwatch and the atmosphere remained thick with carbon dioxide, despite the energetic efforts of her class of third graders to clear the air.

Horsley, a wellness teacher at Toll Gate Grammar School, in Pennington, New Jersey, had tasked the kids with tossing balls of yarn representing carbon dioxide molecules to their peers stationed at plastic disks representing forests. The first round of the game was set in the 1700s, and the kids had cleared the field in under four minutes. But this third round took place in the present day, after the advent of cars, factories and electricity, and massive deforestation. With fewer forests to catch the balls, and longer distances to throw, the kids couldn’t keep up.

Suzanne Horsley, a wellness teacher at Toll Gate Grammar School, in Pennington, New Jersey, speaks with a class of third graders about an activity that combines physical education with climate change instruction. Credit: Caroline Preston/The Hechinger Report

“That was hard,” said Horsley after the round ended. “In this time period versus the 1700s, way more challenging right?

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Caroline Preston

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