TY - JOUR
T1 - Hope or fear?
T2 - Children’s responses to climate change fiction
AU - Koolen, Ruud
AU - van Amelsvoort, Marije
AU - van der Beek, Suzanne
AU - Borst, Rosalyn
AU - Claassen, Semmy
AU - Goudbeek, Martijn
AU - Looij, Phillip
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Although not necessarily intended to persuade, climate fiction narratives can guide individuals in their attitudes and emotions, also in educational settings. An open question is which emotions such narratives should communicate to make an impact, especially for children. We conducted an experiment where 142 children listened to either hopeful or fearful text fragments of Hannah Gold’s children’s climate fiction book The Last Bear (2021). We then measured if and how this narrative experience affected the children’s emotions, attitudes, and intentions towards climate change, as a function of the condition they were in. The results indicate that listening to the text fragments did not affect children’s attitudes but slightly decreased their intention to engage in climate change mitigating behavior, irrespective of hope or fear. The children furthermore reported a variety of emotions after listening. We discuss the impact of climate narratives for children, also considering whether hope and fear can effectively be investigated as two separate emotions.
AB - Although not necessarily intended to persuade, climate fiction narratives can guide individuals in their attitudes and emotions, also in educational settings. An open question is which emotions such narratives should communicate to make an impact, especially for children. We conducted an experiment where 142 children listened to either hopeful or fearful text fragments of Hannah Gold’s children’s climate fiction book The Last Bear (2021). We then measured if and how this narrative experience affected the children’s emotions, attitudes, and intentions towards climate change, as a function of the condition they were in. The results indicate that listening to the text fragments did not affect children’s attitudes but slightly decreased their intention to engage in climate change mitigating behavior, irrespective of hope or fear. The children furthermore reported a variety of emotions after listening. We discuss the impact of climate narratives for children, also considering whether hope and fear can effectively be investigated as two separate emotions.
KW - Children's Climate Fiction
KW - Environmental Education
KW - In-class Reading experiment
KW - Fear and Hope
KW - Environmental attitudes andintentions
KW - Emotions
UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13504622.2026.2618476#abstract
U2 - 10.1080/13504622.2026.2618476
DO - 10.1080/13504622.2026.2618476
M3 - Article
SN - 1350-4622
JO - Environmental Education Research
JF - Environmental Education Research
ER -