ClimateX by Team MITACAL
Jacob Hollander Nov 20, 2015 05:27
Member
| Are you serious about having a great impact and influence real change, or is this about maintaining control and having your name personally stamped on it? I mean the project itself is right in line with what is really needed (accessible science education) however I don't think this is something that's going to catch on and you should borrow a page or several from Bill Nye and Neil Degrasse Tyson when it comes to educating the masses about science. |
Rajesh Kasturirangan Nov 21, 2015 10:48
Member
| Proposal contributor Hey Jake, how did you uncover our plot to take over science education and dominate the universe? We don't want to stop there either, since climate justice isn't only about communicating science but also about changing policy and behavior and to offer green alternatives to conventional careers. We believe we have the right tools to do so. Send us a message if you want to know more. |
Steve Pittman Dec 7, 2015 11:08
Member
| I am astonished at how polarized the climate change debate has become.
Just to be clear on where I currently stand in the debate, I believe prudent steps are appropriate to reduce CO2 emissions over a period of decades and modest investments (less than $10 billion/year) are appropriate to prepare to geoengineer Earth's climate if a crisis erupts. The White House Climate Action Plan does propose to reduce CO2 emissions over a period of decades, precisely the kind of prudent change with a low economic impact appropriate to reduce the risk of catastrophic consequences. See David Kieth's talk for one geoengineering proposal which I believe has merit.
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Rajesh Kasturirangan Dec 8, 2015 05:15
Member
| Proposal contributor @oneskywalker, thanks for your thoughtful response. This is exactly the kind of dialog we need. Do take a look at the other Team MITACAL proposals and spread the word amongst your friends and colleagues. |
Curt Newton Dec 11, 2015 01:20
Member
| I would offer to this plan: MIT OpenCourseWare has published a tremendous amount of MIT course content on climate change. See this list of 40+ course highlights. This content is openly shared with the world under a Creative Commons license, so everyone is free to download, remix, adapt and redistribute - including repurposing in a collection like the ClimateX layer. Happy to talk more about this. |
Rajesh Kasturirangan Dec 16, 2015 05:44
Member
| Proposal contributor Great suggestion, @newcurtains - could we talk offline about this? |
Filip Za???ny Mar 15, 2016 06:55
Catalyst
| Making your plan possible you would need to build efficient network or application. In order to make it secure or efficient I suggest to take a look at the Ethereum Project. |
Rajesh Kasturirangan Mar 15, 2016 07:17
Member
| Proposal contributor Thanks for the suggestion, Filip. |
Alison Halderman Mar 19, 2016 03:43
Member
| Hi...I REALLY like adding the career assist to the existing edX resources. So you would be helping those already educated, orchoosing to be educated about climate then move into positions to do more about it. Or at least that is how I read your proposal. Starting with MIT alumni, using and adding to existing mentoring/guidance systems for alumni, right? Immediately made me want to go to MIT! (PS I am not an alumni or student). Then I got suggestions that the thinking is to expand this to those self educating through edX as resources allow, creating a larger "Climate Corps" than MIT alumni only. Is that a goal or hope? I have a comment or possibly an addition. Since I am not a student or alumni, I might have missed something about the overall culture at MIT, but I was thinking that even at MIT there is probably a percentage not that interested in addressing climate change. I started inventing a survey to identify not only which alumni respond to "climate change" or "global warming", but also to tease out what are the priorities of each alumni and how do those overlap with changes that lower carbon emissions or sequester it? Renewables, for example, lend themselves well to increasing independence from government/ utility structures and lower living or business costs, which are often values held dearly by climate deniers. Honestly, almost longer to talk about such than "show" a draft...this also tied in with some thinking and tweaking I had re my Ecofiction Challenge project, and how it attracts and appeals even climate deniers in part (truly), how I can reframe the language and questions to engage a wider audience. So re my project, instead of inviting people to write fiction set in "the sustainable (Boston, Eugene, Ohio?) of your dreams" ( you write stories set in your own self defined community, whether a street, town, church, school or city)..I would start by asking "what changes would improve the quality of life for you, your family and your community?" and go on from there....my idea being that it may often be very successful in empowering and engaging even people who don't even return the survey, but do think differently as a result of reading and thinking about the questions. Thanks for thinking about this. Let me know if I read the proposal correctly, and your thoughts re an initial or introductory survey as part of your platform. Alison Halderman, Eugene OR PS I'll probably finish composing my idea for a survey and submit it as a proposal to get people looking at it/ hopefully get feedback. Priority is currently running my local version of the Ecofiction Challenge plus all the international networking happening with three countries participating and running their own. Will slow down after Earth Day, or maybe I'll finish a draft survey before more submissions come in. Already we are floating some other projects to follow and build on that network being created by this annual challenge.
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Rajesh Kasturirangan Mar 20, 2016 08:46
Member
| Proposal contributor Hi Alison, Thanks for your thoughtful comments. You are spot on. "the thinking is to expand this to those self educating through edX as resources allow, creating a larger "Climate Corps" than MIT alumni only. Is that a goal or hope?" That's exactly our goal. Thanks for sharing your idea to include an initial survey; I very much like the framing around "what kind of life would you like to live?" best, Rajesh |
Paul Dryfoos Mar 29, 2016 01:40
Member
| Rajesh - The ClimateX proposal goes right at one of the core challenges of human response to climate change - how do we use network tools to accelerate the pace of learning and dissemination to accelerate innovation and bring solutions to scale? New Climate Magazine is proposing to use mass media to this end, so there is a clear commonality of purpose. Citizen's Climate Lobby recently put up Citizen's Climate University, a MOOC focused on general climate literacy and developing expertise in political advocacy. http://citizensclimateeducation.org/tools/citizens-climate-university/ An interesting corollary to your work. I wish you success with this proposal. It is much needed. |
Rajesh Kasturirangan Mar 29, 2016 02:50
Member
| Proposal contributor Thanks for your comment Paul. We would love to talk offline. |
Kingshuk Dasgupta Apr 1, 2016 12:48
Member
| Rajesh, this is a great idea and wish you the best. Have you considered how climate science and its study can take into account and learn from specific practices that indigenous communities have been involved with over the years. Typically, these have not been in the mainstream discourse in academia but the real direct impact of climate change has been in the lives of indigenous communities across the planet. Some cross-pollination efforts in both directions, would, IMO be a very useful goal for your project. |
Rajesh Kasturirangan Apr 1, 2016 12:35
Member
| Proposal contributor Kingshuk, great comment. Indeed, there's a crying need for crowdsourcing (with respect and without appropriating) knowledge from indigenous cultures around the world. Sadly, many of them are now climate/ecological refugees. |
Niraikalai Vijay Apr 19, 2016 06:03
Member
| It is an interesting proposal for harnessing the power of MIT Alumni. I saw the two points under the headline titled "Actions in this area would also be focused on enhancing recruiting of MIT students by verifiably green companies, by: " Then following thought came. I just felt like adding as a comment. But following needs in-depth technical expertise. So I don't know whether it is feasible to provide as a on-line option. One of the point that may be useful is to add a course track on how existing oil & gas companies can play a role in creating green careers in their industry itself. May be by designing/upgrading GHG efficiency in the plant and also methods for better CCS (Carbon Capture & Storage).
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Hemant Wagh Apr 20, 2016 04:40
Member
| Will ClimateX be accessible to leity...??!! |
Rajesh Kasturirangan Apr 20, 2016 07:40
Member
| Proposal contributor Hemant, much of our content will be openly available to the world. |