Act on Climate: Steps to Individual, Community, and Political Action
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Act on Climate: Steps to Individual, Community, and Political Action
Instructor: Michaela Zint
22,491 already enrolled
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201 reviews
201 reviews
What you'll learn
Identify individual, community, and political actions you can engage in to effectively address and respond to climate change.
Describe how insights from the social sciences can be employed to create change at the individual, community, and political levels.
Feel empowered to continue to influence how you, your community, and political leaders address and respond to climate change.
Details to know
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There are 7 modules in this course
Are you concerned about climate change? Would you like to learn how to address and respond to this challenge? If so, this course is for you.
Act on Climate: Steps to Individual, Community, and Political Action is intended to help learners understand, address and respond to climate change as individuals and in partnership with their communities and political leaders. The course focuses on how to translate learning into action on climate change in the areas of food, energy, transportation and the built environment (cities). This course was co-developed and taught by Michaela Zint, Professor of Environmental Education and Communication, and University of Michigan Students. A range of academic climate change experts and professional leaders are featured. As a result of completing this course, you will be able to: 1) Identify individual, community, and political actions you can engage in to effectively address and respond to climate change. 2) Describe how insights from the social sciences can be employed to create change at the individual, community, and political levels. 3) Feel empowered to continue to influence how you, your community, and political leaders address and respond to climate change. Use #UMichActonClimate on social media to share what you're doing and connect with other learners.
As part of this introductory lesson, we will help you explore your motivations for taking this course, briefly introduce you to the current state of climate science and policy, and prepare you for taking actions on climate change throughout the course.
What's included
3 videos19 readings2 assignments
3 videos•Total 31 minutes
- Welcome to the course•8 minutes
- Meet Dahlia•1 minute
- Meet the expert - Dr. Rosina Bierbaum•22 minutes
19 readings•Total 118 minutes
- Course Overview•10 minutes
- Welcome to Act on Climate•15 minutes
- Discussion Prompt - Introduce yourself•5 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Help us learn more about you!•10 minutes
- Syllabus•10 minutes
- Climate science and policy•20 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Climate mitigation and adaptation•3 minutes
- Video references and optional resources•1 minute
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Action types•3 minutes
- Co-benefits and climate justice•3 minutes
- Looking ahead•3 minutes
- Take action to ensure your future success•10 minutes
- Doing our part•1 minute
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Quiz: Assessment of actions•15 minutes
- Discussion Prompt - What actions did you take?•5 minutes
2 assignments•Total 18 minutes
- Check your understanding •10 minutes
- Check your understanding•8 minutes
Food is part of our everyday lives. From breakfast to dinner, we make choices that affect the planet. This week, you will hear from Chris about his journey toward vegetarianism, and you will learn from Dr. Sara Soderstrom about social movement theory and food businesses in Detroit, as well as actions that you can take to make food choices that can mitigate climate change.
What's included
2 videos18 readings4 assignments
2 videos•Total 29 minutes
- Meet Chris•2 minutes
- Meet the Expert: Dr. Sara Soderstrom•27 minutes
18 readings•Total 98 minutes
- Food and climate change•6 minutes
- Video references•1 minute
- Case Study•15 minutes
- Discussion Prompt - Social Movements•5 minutes
- Looking ahead•1 minute
- Anna’s story•3 minutes
- Option 1: Eat less red meat•10 minutes
- Option 2: Reduce food waste•10 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Brandon’s story•3 minutes
- Engage with your community about food•10 minutes
- Nolan’s story•3 minutes
- Influence decision making•10 minutes
- Alison’s story•3 minutes
- Participate in farmer-to-consumer programs•10 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Quiz: Assessment of actions•1 minute
- Discussion Prompt - What actions did you take?•5 minutes
4 assignments•Total 94 minutes
- Check your understanding•30 minutes
- Check your understanding•4 minutes
- Check your understanding•30 minutes
- Assessment of actions•30 minutes
We use energy in almost everything we do, but there are also many ways we can reduce emissions from our energy consumption. This week, you will hear from Benjamin about saving energy in cold winters and from Dr. Kaitlin Raimi about the theory of environmental peer persuasion. You will also learn several actions you can take to reduce energy consumption in your home, on your campus, and in your community.
What's included
2 videos16 readings5 assignments
2 videos•Total 18 minutes
- Meet Benjamin•4 minutes
- Meet the expert - Dr. Kaitlin Raimi•14 minutes
16 readings•Total 84 minutes
- Case study•15 minutes
- Discussion Prompt - What would a climate action plan look like in your community?•5 minutes
- Looking ahead•1 minute
- Stephanie’s story•3 minutes
- Energy consumption•10 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Discussion Prompt - Other tools for tracking energy use•5 minutes
- Alison’s story•1 minute
- Attend a community meeting about alternative energy•10 minutes
- Yousef’s story•3 minutes
- Promote divestment from fossil fuels•10 minutes
- Stephanie’s story•3 minutes
- Prepare for climate-related emergencies•10 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Quiz: Assessment of actions•1 minute
- Discussion Prompt - What actions did you take?•5 minutes
5 assignments•Total 44 minutes
- Check your understanding•5 minutes
- Check your understanding •5 minutes
- Check your understanding •2 minutes
- Check your understanding •2 minutes
- Assessment of actions•30 minutes
Transportation is part of everyday life. This week, you will hear from Stephanie about the collective impact of personal transportation decisions and from Brandon Schoettle about how driving decisions impact greenhouse gas emissions. You will also examine popular ride-hailing services, as well as actions that you can take to make transportation choices that can mitigate climate change, and ultimately you will learn to support a more resilient transportation system.
What's included
2 videos17 readings4 assignments
2 videos•Total 22 minutes
- Meet Stephanie•3 minutes
- Meet the expert - Brandon Schoettle•20 minutes
17 readings•Total 73 minutes
- Video references and optional resources•1 minute
- Video references•1 minute
- Discussion Prompt - Reflection on Brandon's interview•5 minutes
- Case study•10 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Discussion Prompt - The tricky issue of ride-hailing and carpooling•5 minutes
- Looking ahead•1 minute
- Anne Marie’s story•3 minutes
- Reduce emissions from transportation•10 minutes
- Haley’s story•3 minutes
- Join or organize a community bike event•10 minutes
- Derell’s story•3 minutes
- Interacting with your transit authority•10 minutes
- Encourage resilient transportation•3 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Quiz: Assessment of actions•1 minute
- Discussion Prompt - What actions did you take?•5 minutes
4 assignments•Total 20 minutes
- Check your understanding •5 minutes
- Check your understanding •8 minutes
- Check your understanding •5 minutes
- Assessment of actions •2 minutes
There is a complex relationship between our lives and the built infrastructure with which we interact on a daily basis. This week, you will learn about one theory of urban design - “New Urbanism” - and use it as a way to explore these relationships and how you can reimagine the built environment as a means to act on climate change. You will also learn about how one city used deliberative democracy to transform their built environment and move toward carbon neutrality. Together, the content will assist you in identifying how the built environment can be transformed to address the effects of climate change.
What's included
2 videos18 readings4 assignments
2 videos•Total 30 minutes
- Meet Haley•3 minutes
- Meet the expert - Doug Kelbaugh•27 minutes
18 readings•Total 102 minutes
- Why the built environment is important•6 minutes
- Case study•15 minutes
- Lessons from Geraldton - Interview with Janette Hartz-Karp•6 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Looking ahead•1 minute
- The breakdown on New Urbanism•6 minutes
- Explore your city with New Urbanism•10 minutes
- Melanie’s story•3 minutes
- Participate in a resource sharing program•10 minutes
- Discussion Prompt - Community resources•5 minutes
- Chris’s story•6 minutes
- Contact local government about using democratic reform•10 minutes
- Discussion Prompt - Deliberative democracy and participatory budgeting near you•5 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Plant a tree•10 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Quiz: Assessment of actions•1 minute
- Discussion Prompt - What actions did you take?•5 minutes
4 assignments•Total 26 minutes
- Check your understanding •5 minutes
- Check your understanding •8 minutes
- Check your understanding •5 minutes
- Assessment of actions •8 minutes
This week, you will apply ideas you learned in this course, learn about another relevant social change theory, and develop your own Personal Climate Action Plan. As part of this plan you will identify individual and community-related actions that you can take to mitigate the impact of increased greenhouse gas emissions and adapt to climate change after completing this course.
What's included
2 videos8 readings1 assignment1 peer review
2 videos•Total 15 minutes
- Meet Priscila•2 minutes
- Meet the expert - Dr. Jennifer Hirsch•13 minutes
8 readings•Total 98 minutes
- Introduction to Climate Action Plans•3 minutes
- Case study•6 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Bringing it home - Community Climate Action Plan•10 minutes
- Discussion Prompt - Apply the asset-based approach to your community•5 minutes
- Introduction to Personal Climate Action Plan Assignment•3 minutes
- Assignment overivew•10 minutes
- Build your Personal Climate Action Plan•60 minutes
1 assignment•Total 8 minutes
- Check your understanding•8 minutes
1 peer review•Total 30 minutes
- Peer review•30 minutes
You have now learned about a variety of theories of social change and tried a range of mitigation and adaptation actions. We hope that this will not be the end! During this concluding week, we will provide you with resources to continue to engage in climate actions, including: making new practices “stick,” how to work with your community, and why you might even consider making a bigger commitment, like running for political office.
What's included
5 videos12 readings2 assignments
5 videos•Total 65 minutes
- Meet Sachi•2 minutes
- Meet the expert - Dr. Raymond De Young•24 minutes
- Meet the expert - State Representative Yousef Rabhi•19 minutes
- Meet the expert - Mayor Amanda Edmonds•20 minutes
- Dr. Michaela Zint concludes the course•1 minute
12 readings•Total 65 minutes
- Introduction•6 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Improving community engagement•10 minutes
- Optional resources: Climate-related films•1 minute
- Run for office•3 minutes
- Optional resources•1 minute
- Discussion Prompt - Activism through art•5 minutes
- Discussion Prompt - Reflection survey•5 minutes
- Assessment of overall actions•10 minutes
- Acknowledgments•3 minutes
- Post-Course Survey•10 minutes
- Keep Learning with Michigan Online!•10 minutes
2 assignments•Total 10 minutes
- Check your understanding •8 minutes
- Check your understanding •2 minutes
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Reviewed on May 21, 2020
Live green and go blue .Thanks for this excellent course. Gain more knowledge about climate change.
Reviewed on Sep 27, 2020
A very well designed course. It improves the knowledge, and stimulates ones heart to save the planet earth
Reviewed on Nov 3, 2022
Un curso muy didactico para el aporte individual, comunitario y las acciones politicas que se deben de adoptar para hacer frente al cambio climàtico.
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