BAMOS Vol 38 Issue 1 April 2025 BAMOS Vol 38 Issue 1 April 2025 | Page 19

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BAMOS April 2025
19
We have just launched the first season, with five episodes answering kids’ real questions about climate change.
The questions cover the gamut of issues that make up the climate crisis.
Children asked us why snow and ice are melting, why we are still digging up fossil fuels, what technology can do, what’ s going to happen to people on islands that sink beneath the sea, and the biggest question of all – what are we doing about it?
Climate Kids is warm and fun, with animated dinosaurs, and even a bit of time travel. The episodes are all fact-checked by University of Melbourne experts too( except the bit about time travel, we definitely made that up).
The time travel is mostly done by climate scientist Dr Linden Ashcroft( wearing a boiler suit for safety) so she can report back from a future where we have solved the worst of the climate crisis.
We used this narrative device to alleviate kids’ climate anxiety by showing just how solvable this crisis is. We also include concrete actions kids can take to do something about the climate crisis.
Research shows that taking action, particularly in nature, is the best way to combat climate anxiety, and that when kids demand climate action, their parents listen to them( much more than climate experts like us).
The kids asking the questions in Season 1 are mainly from the bush, and their questions reflect what they are seeing around them.
In Episode 5‘ Snow and Ice’, for example, kids from the Victorian Alps are asking why they are seeing so little snow in the middle of winter.
In the regional area where he still lives, Tom knows many firefighters, including people who have just got back from helping to fight Canadian forest fires.
Tom asked us,“ Why can’ t we stop fossil fuel companies digging up coal, oil and gas?”. In Episode 3 we answer him, via a detour to the time of Queen Elizabeth I.
We hope these videos will be watched by parents too, because we know from our own experience that adults will watch kids’ shows( Bluey, we’ re looking at you).
We also know many adults are feeling ill-equipped to take climate action, and how vital action is.
A positive climate future, like the one these videos imagine, is possible. But achieving it needs governments and businesses to act fast and hard to avert catastrophe.
Don’ t our kids deserve this?
Climate Kids videos are hosted on YouTube and are open source and free to be used by media or teachers.
Ep 1: What is climate change? Ep 2: Can technology save us? Ep 3: Why are we still digging up fossil fuels? Ep 4: The oceans Ep 5: Snow and ice
This article was first published on Pursuit. Read the original article.
Research shows that taking action, particularly in nature, is the best way to combat climate anxiety. Picture: Getty Images