Using fairy tales to teach about climate change
CategoriesSustainable News

Using fairy tales to teach about climate change

Spotted: Climate change may appear simple on the surface, but it is a rather complicated topic to teach. And schools could be doing a better job. Data collected by UNESCO from 100 countries shows that only 53 per cent of the world’s national education curricula reference climate change, and 40 per cent included only a minimal level of content. To help individuals better understand the climate crisis, a team led by Lancaster University – which also included researchers from the Universities of Strathclyde and Manchester – has focused on developing accessible and memorable ways of communicating sustainability-related topics – using fairy tales. 

Fairy tales are not only for children, and the team is using them to respond to the various challenges of climate change, including electricity generation, low-carbon transport, and plastic pollution. The team has presented three “telling tales” on these topics, using the characters of mermaids, vampires, and witches as metaphors to communicate the typically complicated arguments more engagingly.  

The mermaids, or sirens, highlight the potentially dangerous allure of renewable energy sources in the UK, which can cause us to ignore wider issues like excessive energy consumption. Vampires serve as embodiments for cars, sucking the wellbeing out of the environment and communities, while the witches are a metaphor for the broader ‘witch hunt’ against plastics, which puts a narrow focus on the material itself, rather than spotlighting the unsustainable and ineffective systems that can make plastic so harmful. The team worked with illustrator Véronique Heijnsbroek to create corresponding images for the stories. 

The team hopes this concept will inspire the science community to communicate energy-based social science research in more digestible formats to engage with those outside of academia. This August, the team is planning to conduct a virtual workshop with other researchers and illustrators to further develop and broaden their collection of characters. 

Climate education is essential, and Springwise has spotted many innovations in the archive helping to make the topic more teachable. These include wooden blocks that teach children about energy and using Minecraft to demonstrate the impact of climate change.

Written By: Anam Alam

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Using dolls to teach girls to code
CategoriesSustainable News

Using dolls to teach girls to code

Spotted: There is a big shortage of coders. According to the US Labor Department, the global shortage of software engineers is estimated to reach 85.2 million by 2030. A lot of this could be fixed by closing the gender gap in coding – it is estimated that women make up just 16 per cent of the IT Engineering workforce. Startup E-liza is hoping to change that – with a doll. The company builds dolls that include programmable computers that girls can code through an app.

Founder Eliza Kosoy, a PhD student studying child development and artificial intelligence, came up with the idea because she wanted a way for girls to learn about coding without having to give up their other interests. The doll, which is being launched on Kickstarter in 2023, operates using hardware embedded in each doll. It has a screen and is Bluetooth-enabled to receive code from a companion app.

Girls (and boys) can code the doll to perform various actions, such as acting as a security alarm. Built-in and add-on sensors extend the doll’s utility. For example, a heartbeat pulse sensor can be used to turn the doll into a lie detector.

Kosoy points out that the toy market is filled with STEM toys that are marketed specifically towards boys, and girls may like the opportunity to play with a toy designed for them.

Closing the STEM gender gap is the subject of a huge number of innovations covered here at Springwise. Ideas include a crowdfunding platform for STEM projects led by women and a predictive text app that reverses gendered language.

Written By: Lisa Magloff

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