FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 18, 2023
Contact:
Vincent Grassi (609) 984-1795
Lawrence Hajna (609) 984-1795
Caryn Shinske (609) 984-1795
MURPHY ADMINISTRATION LAUNCHES RESOURCE TO HELP TEACHERS INCORPORATE CLIMATE CHANGE INTO LESSON PLANS

“I am thrilled to join First Lady Tammy Murphy and NJDEP Commissioner LaTourette in celebrating the launch of this invaluable resource aimed at empowering our teachers to seamlessly integrate climate change into their lesson plans,” said Dr. Angelica Allen-McMillan, Acting Commissioner of Education. “Education is the key to a sustainable future, and by equipping our educators with the tools and knowledge they need, we are nurturing a generation of young minds who will become passionate stewards of our planet, working together to combat the challenges of climate change.”
“Public health is closely connected to our physical, biological, and ecological systems, and disruptions to these systems resulting from climate change can have profound impacts on people and communities. These impacts can be especially detrimental to vulnerable communities, compounding the existing burden of disease and exacerbating barriers to accessing health care services,” said NJ Acting Health Commissioner Dr. Kaitlan Baston. “Climate education will provide valuable and actionable lessons for New Jersey students to prepare for, adapt to, and mitigate the health impacts of climate change.”
In easy-to-understand language, the document summarizes two groundbreaking climate change reports prepared by the DEP – the 2020 NJ Scientific Report on Climate Change and the 2022 Health Addendum: Climate Change Impacts on Health and Communities, providing essential background teachers need to teach climate change and fulfill the climate change standards. This document may be especially helpful for non-science teachers who need to meet the standards but have no background in climate change.
Content areas where teachers are required to teach climate change are:
- Visual and Performing Arts
- Comprehensive Health and Physical Education
- Science
- Social Studies
- World Languages
- Computer Science & Design Thinking
- Career Readiness, Life Literacies and Key Skills
Teachers can print out the PDF and use it as reference material when planning lessons and teaching. The QR code on the last page of the PDF links to more resources. Since the resources are a website and not static in the document, DEP can add new lessons and climate change documents as they become available.
The linked lessons are from New Jersey Climate Change Education Hub and were developed by SubjectToClimate. Supporting organizations include National Wildlife Federation, New Jersey Audubon, New Jersey School Boards Association, Sustainable Jersey and The College of New Jersey. The lessons are correlated to the NJ climate change learning standards and are searchable by age range and subject area.
SubjectToClimate has two additional programs to support climate change learning in NJ. The Climate Education Mentor program matches teachers with mentors to support the implementation of the NJ Climate Education Standards into their lesson plans and classroom, and the Teacher Task Force, which creates NJ-based lesson plans for the New Jersey Climate Change Education Hub to inspire teachers to teach about climate change.
To stay updated on climate change education announcements, teachers can join DEP’s environmental education email list.
The DEP created a video about the Summary of Climate Change in New Jersey.
The DEP’s newly updated climate change website includes a more user-friendly homepage and a collection of interactive story maps titled Climate Change in New Jersey: Impacts and Effects, which provide up-to-date climate change research, build upon the findings of the 2020 NJ Scientific Report on Climate Change, and use a direct, easy-to-understand format that includes maps, photos, graphs, animations and more.