Katie Worth is an Emmy and Edward R. Murrow Award-winning investigative journalist. From 2015 to 2021, she worked for the PBS series FRONTLINE on enterprise investigations and multimedia stories about science and politics. Her work has appeared in Scientific American, National Geographic, Slate, The Wall Street Journal, and was included in The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2016.
Exceptional reporting undergirds the truly shocking facts in this book: the fossil fuel industry is doing all that it can to undermine education about climate change, which will be the most important fact in the lifetimes of kids in school today. Thank heaven for the teachers who stand up for the truth-and thank heaven that this book will spark a crucial national conversation about the hijacking of our educational system. -Bill McKibben Miseducation is a cautionary tale of the wide-ranging impacts that political agendas can have when deployed in educational settings. -Science A striking look at how climate change is taught in American primary and secondary schools. -Publishers Weekly, starred review A damning report on the state of science education in America, especially regarding climate change. -Kirkus Reviews A must read for parents and teachers. -Moms Clean Air Force Miseducation documents many cracks in American climate education while offering educators models for improving their engagement with students and communities. And in expanding the definition of 'good climate education' to include students' civic development, the book transmits a heightened sense of urgency. -The Elective Boy, do we need this book now. As the looming climate catastrophe introduces itself by fire and flood, as the world's leaders need a sense of public urgency to make some hard choices, Katie Worth discovers widespread climate denialism in our nation's schools. Ignorance of the scientific consensus, ideological pressure, fossil-fuel industry disinformation, and a well-meaning but misguided desire to tell 'both sides'-it is a disheartening story, richly reported, clearly told and (we can only hope) just in time. -Bill Keller, former executive editor of The New York Times and founding editor of The Marshall Project In her meticulously researched and vividly written book, Katie Worth provides a detailed, comprehensive, and often enraging examination of the forces that obstruct climate change education in the United States through denial, doubt, and delay. But she also offers a glimmer of hope. Miseducation is essential reading for anybody who cares about the climate. -Glenn Branch, deputy director, National Center for Science Education Climate change is an unprecedented threat to our global community, and the frontlines of our efforts to address that threat are in the nation's classrooms where clearheaded, well-informed educators can provide the coming generation with the facts about its causes and likely consequences. But what if those classrooms have been infiltrated by bad actors? In this engagingly written and important book, Katie Worth reveals how the science education that might save us has been influenced by partisan politics and special interests putting the future of us all at risk. -John L. Rudolph, University of Wisconsin-Madison, and author of How We Teach Science: What's Changed, and Why It Matters Young people horrified about climate change are standing up against fossil fuel companies and governments the world over. Amid this global youth uprising, Katie Worth reveals in horrifying detail the ways in which children in American schools are being methodically-and oftentimes successfully-targeted with climate misinformation designed to keep profits and pollution from oil, coal and gas flowing. This deeply reported book names names and reveals filthy secrets and should be essential reading for anybody concerned for the future of humanity. -John Upton, editor at Climate Central Katie Worth's Miseducation explores an under-appreciated but extremely important aspect of our climate crisis: the active mis-education around climate change in American schools. She explains how conservative politicians, well-funded right-wing foundations, and frightened textbook publishers, have watered down, eliminated or confused the ways the issue is presented to tens of millions of school children. They hope to raise another generation that will fail to act on what may be the greatest threat to our future. But, as Worth shows, efforts by committed educators has led to some real progress and represents reasons for hope. -Alexander Stille, San Paolo Professor of International Journalism at Columbia, author of The Force of Things: A Marriage in War and Peace