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Pauline Jones, Associate Professor in Language in Education, University of Wollongong

6 books to help talk to your child about climate change

Timur Weber/Pexels, CC BY

Many children and young people are anxious about climate change and what it means for their futures.

But adults can face the dilemma of how to talk to children about these incredibly serious issues without upsetting them further.

We are educational linguists investigating how writers and illustrators communicate ideas related to climate change to children. Books are an important way to help conversations around climate change in safe, age-appropriate ways.

Children’s literature has long been the vehicle for talking about difficult subjects, exploring the world from different perspectives and offering readers a means to imagine different ways of living.

Here are six books from Australian writers and illustrators that can help parents and carers look at issues related to climate change with children from preschool to the late primary years.

They have been chosen because they offer their readers hope, foster relationships to the environment and encourage agency and courage. These can all help children develop positive coping strategies around climate change.

1. Walk of the Whales by Nick Bland

For children four and up

Walk of the Whales shows children how the world around them is interconnected.

It is a simple tale of what happens when whales walk out of polluted oceans and establish homes on land. The ensuing chaos is brought to life through humorous illustrations, where the whales are shown wreaking havoc on their new homes. Imagine sharing a lane at the swimming pool with an whale or the state of the pavements when whales play jumprope!

This thought-provoking tale is told with a lightness of touch which will delight young readers while illustrating the consequences of our actions in a delicately balanced world.

2. Iceberg by Claire Saxby and illustrated by Jess Racklyeft

For children five and up

Iceberg is a beautifully illustrated book that brings the luminescent beauty of Antarctica to life. It is told from the perspective of an iceberg over the course of a year.

It presents Antarctica as rich, dynamic and teeming with abundant sea life. For children, Iceberg makes a gentle plea to appreciate and protect the world around us before it is lost forever.


Read more: How do we teach young people about climate change? We can start with this comic


3. How to Bee by Bren MacDibble

For children eight to 12 years

How to Bee is set in a future Australia where insecticide has rendered bees extinct.

The importance of biodiversity is a key theme, as is our place within the ecosystem.

However, the strongest environmental message is carried by the fierce nine-year-old, Peony. Her fraught battle to return home parallels the return of bees to the farm and hope for the future.

For children struggling with climate anxiety and feelings of powerlessness, this novel models strategies for building resilience.


Read more: How should we teach climate change in schools? It starts with 'turbo charging' teacher education


4. Bindi by Kirli Saunders and illustrated by Dub Leffler

For children eight to 12 years

With an El Niño event underway in Australia, young readers may find refuge from climate anxiety in the pages of Bindi.

This beautifully illustrated verse novel is told from the perspective of an 11-year-old Indigenous girl as her town survives catastrophic bushfires.

The poetry evokes an idyllic rural childhood while also propelling a cracking plot. Gundungurra language (from south east New South Wales) is woven throughout, inviting readers to learn Language (canbe means fire). Children will find strength in this story of perseverance and healing and may also develop a deeper connection to Country.


Read more: 'I tend to be very gentle': how teachers are navigating climate change in the classroom


5. The Giant and the Sea by Trent Jamieson and illustrated by Rovina Cai

For children eight and up

This is an exquisitely illustrated picture book that tackles climate change in a lyrical and rhythmical style.

A giant stands watch over the sea and warns a “brave girl” the sea is rising. This girl is reminiscent of young climate activists whose warnings – like those of our child hero – are often dismissed, with increasingly disastrous consequences.

The book deals with themes of whose voices count, the problem of unsustainable growth and how humans will adapt to different futures.

The Giant and the Sea doesn’t shy away from the effects of global warming, noting, “There is only so much that bravery can do”. Despite its dystopian conclusion, young readers will find the book motivating and hopeful because it shows they have a role to play alongside adults in this multigenerational problem.

6. Blueback by Tim Winton

For children eight and up

Blueback charts the life of Abel from child to adult.

It is a fable that explores his deep connection to ocean life and the human pressures on the natural world.

Through Abel’s mother Dora, Winton offers children a hero whose dogged but successful campaign to save a threatened site spreads

like a coral spawn, those letters, tiny white messages that drifted out from Longboat Bay into the offices of people all of the country.

In such beautiful prose, Winton shows children the importance of courage and resilience and reminds us all of our collective responsibility for the environment. This is a book that can inspire readers of all ages.


Read more: 'What am I supposed to do about all this really bad stuff?' Young people identify 7 'superpowers' to fight climate change


The Conversation

Pauline Jones is currently engaged in literacy research projects funded by the NSW Department of Education and the Association of Independent Schools, NSW. She has previously received funding from the Australian Research Council. She is President of the Primary English Teaching Association Australia.

Annette Turney is currently engaged in literacy research projects funded by the NSW Department of Education.

Anne Hellwig does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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