You ask and we answer.
Over the last four years, children from schools from across Tasmania have been sending us their questions about climate change.
Our team of climate scientists, conservation biologists, fire scientists, chemists, lawyers, engineers, psychologists, social scientists, oceanographers, Indigenous knowledge specialists and health experts, have answered more than 600 of your questions!
You can find answers to questions by searching for a particular topic, or looking at the questions we've organised into themes: most asked, looking ahead & taking action.
Or you can find out what questions each class asked, or look up an expert for all their answers.
Or you can find out what questions each class asked, or look up an expert for all their answers.
There are resources for students and teachers in our Toolkit. Here you can find information about the science of climate change, impacts of the climate crisis, how to navigate feelings about climate change and ways to take individual and collective action.
Want to get involved?
We're currently updating our programs, with new resources including a cartoon guide to climate change and what we can do about it, expert Q&A, expert visits and climate adaptation game workshops, which will be initially be available to a limited number of schools in Terms three and four, 2024.
If you are a Tasmanian teacher and are would like your class to participate, you can register your interest at [email protected] and we will get back to you with more information.
If you are a Tasmanian teacher and are would like your class to participate, you can register your interest at [email protected] and we will get back to you with more information.
Who is behind Curious Climate Schools? Curious Climate Schools is run by climate change and education researchers the University of Tasmania. It’s received funding from the Tasmanian Climate Change Office, the University’s School of Geography, Planning, and Spatial Sciences (GPSS), the University’s Centre for Marine Socioecology (CMS), and the University's Sustainability Centre. Curious Climate Schools builds on the first successful Curious Climate project which answered climate questions in communities around Tasmania.