Teaching and learning approaches that cultivate realistic hope through understanding both climate crisis and collective power.
Sor Juana's intellectual work modeled how learning itself could be liberatory—not accepting received doctrine but investigating, questioning, and imagining alternatives. Critical hope in climate education means teaching the full truth of ecological breakdown while simultaneously practicing collective problem-solving and witnessing community resistance. It refuses both toxic positivity (individual action solves everything) and despair (nothing matters). Instead, it teaches climate history as a story of struggle and victory: how communities have successfully challenged polluters, how ecosystems recover when given space, how movements have won transformative policy. Pedagogical practices include participatory science, community history projects, and skill-building for environmental advocacy. By grounding hope in concrete examples of resistance and change, we develop the emotional resilience and strategic clarity needed for long-term climate work. This pedagogy treats learning itself as part of the solution, cultivating generations who understand both crisis and agency.
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