How to Teach Climate Change:
A Practitioner Manual for
Climate Education

A whole-school framework for meeting climate education requirements in safe, practical and developmentally appropriate ways

This manual offers practical climate change teaching resources for teachers who want to help children understand climate issues through care, connection, and real-world action.

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Buy for up to 10 Staff

Buy for up to 20 Staff

Climate Education Without Fear

Developed by Marina Robb, founder of The Outdoor Teacher, this practitioner manual draws on over 30 years’ experience in outdoor learning, child development, wellbeing and systems-based education.

It has been written in response to the growing expectation for schools to address climate education - and the very real concern about how to do this well without creating fear, overload or unrealistic demands on staff.

This manual offers a clear, grounded framework that supports confidence, coherence and care.

Why this manual matters now

By the end of December 2025 in England (with many settings aiming for September 2025), Department for Education states that:

Schools are expected to:

Appoint a Sustainability Lead
Have an active Climate Action Plan (CAP)

Plans are expected to address:

Decarbonisation & Net Zero
Adaption & Resilience
Biodiversity & Nature
Climate Education & Green Skills

While guidance was initially non-statutory, this is now a clear system expectation, increasingly linked to inspection, funding and accountability.
The risk for many schools is that climate education becomes:

Another Compliance Task
Another Burden on Already Stretched Staff

This manual offers a different way in.

Children Planting


This manual is:

A whole-school practitioner manual for climate education
Designed for real school life, not ideal conditions

Grounded in:

Outdoor Learning, regulation and wellbeing, nature connection and scientific and systems understanding

This is not a scheme of work or qualification.
It is a shared framework that helps schools respond in ways that are thoughtful, credible and emotionally safe.


Who is this manual for?

This manual is for schools and educational settings as a whole.

It is intended to be used collaboratively by teachers, teaching assistants and practitioners working directly with children and young people; sustainability, wellbeing and inclusion leads coordinating this work; and headteachers, managers and senior leaders responsible for ensuring the school has a clear and credible response.

The manual is designed to be shared across staff, forming a common reference point rather than sitting with one role or department.

What's Included?


The Manual

The Climate Education Practitioner Manual PDF includes:

  • Clear background guidance for adults (Part 1 - 4)
  • Practical, ready-to-use outdoor practices (128 Suggested Practices across KS1 - KS4)
  • Climate Action Plan Grid and curriculum links
  • Guidance that supports regulation, agency and emotional safety

It includes eight climate domains, each focusing on a key aspect of climate education that schools need to consider. The domains provide age-appropriate, context-sensitive ideas and practices that can be applied flexibly across different phases, themes and settings.

The domains are designed to be explored one at a time, in ways that fit each school’s context, priorities and capacity.

The Eight Climate Domains

The domains focus on the human capacities young people need to live well in a changing world:

  • New Vision: Fair Share, Power & Justice
  • Ecological Citizens: Human Health & Wellbeing
  • Democracy, Power and Agency
  • Carbon Cycle & Real Zero
  • Nitrogen & Nutrient Cycles
  • Water Cycle: Rivers to Oceans
  • Biodiversity
  • Natural Law & Ecological Boundaries.
8 cover images

How this supports your school or setting

For teachers and practitioners, the manual builds confidence in addressing climate-related topics through outdoor learning. It offers practical guidance that can be adapted across ages, needs and contexts, supporting emotionally safe, thoughtful practice without adding pressure or workload.

For leaders and managers, the manual provides a coherent framework staff can work from together, offers a credible way to evidence climate education within a Climate Action Plan, and supports clear alignment with wellbeing, inclusion and curriculum priorities. This enables a consistent, whole-setting response that is developmentally appropriate and grounded in care.

How to use it

  • You do not need specialist knowledge 

  • You do not need to “cover” everything

  • Small, consistent practices matter more than perfect plans

One regular outdoor practice, one domain focus, and one human skill is enough to begin.

Over time, climate education becomes part of how the school operates, not an added topic.

Format & Pricing

The Climate Education Manual is delivered as a PDF and is designed for whole-school use.

Single Licence

Buy for up to 10 Staff

Buy for up to 20 Staff

Personalised approach

If your school, trust or organisation is looking for a more personalised approach, there may be opportunities to explore additional support or guidance with Marina and The Outdoor Teacher team.
Please contact us to discuss what might be helpful for your setting.

The Forest School Activities Training


Our foundation training course comes with lifetime access to over 100 step by step inspirational videos and resources.
Designed for teachers and practitioners. Single modules are £47 +vat or save £100 when you buy the 8 module bundle

FAQ

Who should lead this work in our school or setting?

  • DfE expects schools to appoint a Sustainability Lead to coordinate Climate Action Plans

  • This works best when a sustainability, wellbeing, or inclusion lead coordinates day-to-day activity

  • Senior leaders provide strategic backing and direction

  • Practitioners embed it through everyday teaching and outdoor practice

  • The manual doesn’t require specialist climate knowledge

  • It offers a shared framework for staff, reducing reliance on individual champions

  • The aim is to make climate education part of normal practice across the setting

  • How should we work with the domains over time?

    The Eight Climate Domains are designed to be worked with gradually and flexibly, in ways that fit each setting’s capacity and priorities.
    Most schools begin with:

    • One domain
    • One regular practice over a half-term or term

    Domains can be revisited and deepened over time, supporting progression without the need to “cover” everything.
    This approach aligns well with Climate Action Plans, which are expected to be living documents that develop over time rather than one-off submissions.

    Progress is built through: 

    • Repetition
    • Shared language
    • Consistent, relational practice

    Is my tutor qualified?

    Yes, Marina Robb is an author and UK Forest School Association Endorsed Trainer and has been training Forest School Leaders since 2011. She has been working with groups in nature since 1995 and you can read more here.

    Is this academically robust?

    Yes. The manual is written at a high academic level to ensure teachers and leaders are equipped with accurate, up-to-date information and sound systems understanding. It does not simplify or dilute the science for adults. Instead, it supports staff to translate complex ideas into developmentally appropriate, emotionally safe learning for children and young people.

    Is this suitable for early years, primary and secondary settings?

    Yes. The framework is intentionally age-appropriate rather than age-specific and is designed to work across the full education system, including Key Stage 1 - 4 - primary, secondary and appropriate alternative provision.

    The same domains can be explored through:

    • Sensory, play-based and relational practices in early years

    • Inquiry, systems thinking and responsibility in primary

    • Deeper agency, ethics and real-world application in secondary

    Practitioners are encouraged to use their professional judgement when adapting activities.

    Who should lead this work in our school or setting?

    The Department for Education expects schools to appoint a Sustainability Lead to coordinate Climate Action Plans and related activity.

    In practice, this work is most effective when:

    • A sustainability, wellbeing or inclusion lead coordinates the approach

    • Senior leaders support it strategically

    • Practitioners bring it to life through everyday teaching and outdoor practice

    The manual is designed so that leadership does not require specialist climate expertise. Instead, it supports the Sustainability Lead and leadership team by providing a shared framework staff can work from together, reducing reliance on individual champions and helping climate education become part of how the setting operates.

    Is this relevant for schools outside the UK?

    Yes. While the manual references current UK government expectations around Climate Action Plans and sustainability leadership, the framework itself is not UK-specific.

    The Eight Climate Domains, Outdoor Teacher approach, and emphasis on systems thinking, wellbeing and agency reflect widely recognised best practice in climate and sustainability education.

    Schools outside the UK can use the framework in ways that align with their own national, regional or organisational requirements.

    Our commitment to Nature & People:

    The Outdoor Teacher, alongside its sister organization Circle of Life Rediscovery CIC aim to transform health, education and family through nature.

    We are whole-heartedly concerned about the safeguarding of future generations, human and non-human alike, and the growing understanding of reciprocity between humans and nature. Whilst we are advocates for all people accessing nature and its benefits, we know that this is only healthy if we prioritise the care for the natural world and address issues of equality.

    The Outdoor Teacher is working towards becoming a certified B-Corp. Certified B Corps are a new kind of business that balances purpose and profit. They are legally required to consider the impact of their decisions on their workers, customers, suppliers, community, and the environment. We aim to be part of this community of leaders, driving a global movement of people using businesses as a force for good.

    We are using Monzo Business Banking which is listed as an ethical bank: https://monzo.com/ethics.

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