Reasons to be Cheerful with Ed Miliband & Geoff Lloyd
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Hello! This week we're coming at you from Stratford-upon-Avon with the first part of our conversation from the Live at the RSC Festival. We're talking about the current state of climate education and why there's a long way to go until we're hitting top marks. Thankfully, our three guests are here to keep us cheerful and tell us about the campaigning and work they've been doing to make a new climate curriculum a reality. We hear from Scarlett Westbrook who wrote a parliamentary bill while she was still at school, from Elena Lengthorn who's on a quest to make sure teachers are equipped to educate the next generation about the climate crisis, and from Mary Colwell, who recently won a decade-long battle to get a new Natural History GCSE in schools.
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This conversation was recorded at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre as part of the Live at the RSC Festival on June 3rd.
Guests
Scarlett Westbrook - Climate activist and writer of the Climate Education Bill (@ScarlettOWest)
Elena Lengthorn - Senior Lecturer of Teacher Education, Worcester University (@ELengthorn)
Mary Colwell - Writer, founder of Curlew Action and leader of the campaign for a Natural History GCSE (@curlewcalls)
More information
Learn more about the work of the Royal Shakespeare Company
Learn more about Teach the Future, the student-led organisation advocating for better climate education
Read about the Climate Education Bill and Scarlett's work on writing it, with MP Nadia Whittome
Watch Scarlett's TED Talk
Read about Mary's journey to make the Natural History GCSE a reality
The correlation between nature connectedness and pro-environmental behaviour
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Reasons Revisited: Beyond GDP
It's fun to stay at the YHA: who gets to access the outdoors?
Loss, love and a calling to nature: Ben Goldsmith
The hidden story of Chinese food: Fuchsia Dunlop
How to fix the broken food system: Henry Dimbleby
What about men?: Caitlin Moran
How to end our very British culture war: Sunder Katwala
Throwing shade: why you’ll never take trees for granted again
Fields of Dreams: how music festivals moved from the margins to the mainstream
Never stopped us dreaming: the rise of women’s football
Driven to distraction: can we resist the attention economy?
Freewheeling: how to embrace the bicycle boom
Will there be a Hollywood ending? why the writers are on strike
The People's Plan for Nature: how re-imagining our democracy could save nature
Live at the RSC Part 2: the return of the Doctor
Business as (un)usual: can people and planet really come before profit?
Reasons to be Letchworth: what can we learn from the garden city movement?
But what can I do?: a conversation with Alastair Campbell
Thank you, next: breaking up with the job for life
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