Research reveals that students in marginalized communities often endure extreme heat in classrooms, a phenomenon called “temperature inequality.” This hidden barrier affects learning outcomes and exacerbates educational disparities. This article explores the causes, impacts, and potential solutions to this overlooked issue.
climate justice
Climate Injustice: The Hidden Educational Divide in Overheated Classrooms
New research reveals how extreme heat disproportionately harms learning outcomes for marginalized communities, creating an invisible barrier to educational equity. Students from low-income and minority backgrounds face “climate inequality” in classrooms lacking proper cooling systems.
Heat Waves and Learning Gaps: How Students in Marginalized Communities Struggle in Extreme Heat
While education equity discussions often overlook classroom conditions, research reveals that students in marginalized communities face “thermal inequality”—learning in extreme heat with inadequate cooling systems, exacerbating existing resource gaps.
Climate Inequality: The Education Gap in Overheated Classrooms
Research highlights how children in marginalized communities are disproportionately affected by extreme heat in classrooms, worsening education inequality. Immediate action is needed to address this.
Climate Inequality: The Education Gap in Overheated Classrooms
Extreme heat disproportionately affects marginalized communities, creating unequal educational outcomes. This “temperature bias” highlights broader social justice issues, demanding urgent policy and societal action.
