Climate Change as a Game. (Co)Designing with Children Landscapes of Change

Activity: Talk or presentationTalk or presentation at a conference

Description

Today’s new generations, and in particular young people, will face consistent landscape changes during their existence. Can we create consciousness in young generations of how climate change will modify land-scapes and cities? Can we involve children and university students in co-designing the landscape consider-ing climate change? Can we develop new educational methods and co-designed techniques for primary and tertiary education?
This presentation will introduce the Comenius Fellowship results for didactical and pedagogical innova-tion—an invitation to act collectively to save our planet Earth and to develop a positive attitude and emotional knowledge in contact with nature to tackle the climate transition.
Starting from exploring different forms of games, the project aims to educate and engage younger genera-tions in climate change issues. The game becomes the tool through which students can acquire knowledge, observe the world from different perspectives and ultimately imagine and transform the future world. Games are ‘designed experiences’ in which players can learn through doing and being, rather than absorb-ing information in traditional educational formats. By assuming various roles and perspectives, the educa-tional experience of play triggers emotions that help to acquire new awareness, develop a more complex vision of the future, and finally make decisions.
In the project, students from the landscape, architecture, and urban disciplines explored the past, present, and future of an assigned landscape, adopting the concepts of play, design, and climate change. Later, stu-dents themselves became ‘actors of change’ involving children in co-designing and co-creating a collective outdoor climate game on-site.
Period9 Sept 2024
Event titleECLAS Conference 2024: Regenerative Landscapes. Designing the Transition
Event typeConference
LocationBruxelles, BelgiumShow on map
Degree of RecognitionInternational

Keywords

  • climate change education
  • climate change and youth
  • climate change game
  • playful pedagogies