ENVS4330 - Climate Change and Communication: Theories and Applications

Status
A
Activity
SEM
Section number integer
401
Title (text only)
Climate Change and Communication: Theories and Applications
Term
2024A
Subject area
ENVS
Section number only
401
Section ID
ENVS4330401
Course number integer
4330
Level
undergraduate
Instructors
Kathleen Hall Jamieson
Thandi A. Lyew
Michael Mann
Description
This course will focus on understanding the multiple ways in which climate science is communicated to publics and how they come to understand it. In the process, we will explore ways to blunt susceptibilities to misconceptions, misconstruals, and deliberate deceptions about climate science. Forms of communication on which the class will focus include consensus statements, manifestos, commentaries, court briefs, news accounts, fact checks, op-eds, letters to the editor, speeches, and media interviews. Students will have the opportunity to interact with guest lecturers, among them leading journalists, climate activists, and climate survey analysts. Students will write letters to the editor and fact checks and will participate in mock interviews designed to increase their understanding of the nature of the interactions between journalists and climate scientists. As a class project, students will collaborate on a white paper on climate discourse fallacies to be distributed at the April 3-7 Society for Environmental Journalists annual convention (hosted by the Annenberg Public Policy Center and the Penn Center for Science, Sustainability, and Media). Students will interview attendees at that conference as part of the class project.
Course number only
4330
Cross listings
COMM4330401, COMM6330401, ENVS6330401
Use local description
No