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Washinton Post: How to teach climate control in a skeptical North Idaho community

Lake City High science teacher was recognized in 2014 as the Teacher of the Year in Idaho. (Idaho Education Association photo)

Sarah Kaplan/Washington Post reports:

Jakob Namson peered up at the towering ponderosa pine before him. He looked at his notebook, which was full of calculations scribbled in pencil. Then he looked back at the pine. If his math was right — and it nearly always is — he would need to plant 36 trees just like this one to offset the 831 pounds of carbon dioxide that his drive to school emits each year.

Namson, 17, gazed around at his classmates, who were all examining their own pines in northern Idaho’s Farragut State Park. He considered the 76 people in this grove, the 49,000 people in his home town of Coeur d’Alene, the millions of people in the United States driving billions of miles a year — and approached his teacher, Jamie Esler, with a solemn look on his face. Full story here.

Question: Have any of your children taken classes from Jamie Esler?

* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Huckleberries Online." Read all stories from this blog