Today’s Solutions: March 26, 2025

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM

San Francisco State University is setting a historic precedent by becoming the first major public university in the U.S. to require all students to take a climate justice course before graduating. Beginning as early as fall 2026, this initiative ensures that students understand both the science of climate change and its social impacts.

“Our students’ lives are already being impacted by climate change, and so we think it’s part of our responsibility as a university to prepare students for that,” said Autumn Thoyre, co-director of SF State’s Climate HQ, a hub supporting climate-related work on campus.

Rather than treating climate change as solely a STEM issue, the university is embedding climate justice into multiple disciplines, including ethnic studies, history, humanities, and English. The move highlights how climate change intersects with race, class, and gender, disproportionately affecting marginalized communities who are often at the forefront of climate solutions.

Climate justice: more than just science

SF State defines climate justice as the recognition of unequal climate change impacts on underserved populations and the leadership of frontline communities in developing solutions. The new requirement aims to educate students on systemic inequalities that shape both climate vulnerability and policy responses.

Thoyre emphasized that all careers will be climate-related in the future, stating, “Climate change is an all-hands-on-deck crisis that requires understanding and solutions from all different disciplines and sectors of society.”

To meet the requirement, more than 100 courses are being recertified to incorporate climate justice themes. These courses will be woven into existing degree programs, ensuring that every student—regardless of major—gains an understanding of how climate change shapes global and local realities.

Local action in the face of federal setbacks

SF State’s decision comes at a pivotal time in U.S. climate policy. With federal backslides in climate commitments, including the Trump administration’s second withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, Thoyre sees this initiative as an example of local resistance to federal inaction.

“Local-scale change is a first step toward something bigger,” she said. “We’re not going to make good progress at the federal level in the United States for the next four years, so we’ll likely have a backslide. But so much of climate change innovation—regarding policy, movements, and education—is happening at the local level.”

For students like Isaac Barajas, a junior studying industrial design, the course requirement represents a critical step toward awareness and activism. “I have fallen into the trap of believing things that weren’t real,” he admitted, highlighting the spread of climate misinformation online. “This climate justice requirement will allow more students to be socially aware and more informed.”

Preparing for a changing world

The climate justice requirement is not just about understanding climate science—it’s about preparing students for a world reshaped by climate change. Barajas, who grew up in California’s Salinas Valley, has already witnessed extreme climate effects, from droughts to severe rainfall.

“Climate change is going to come for all of us,” he said. “If we don’t act now, it’s just going to catch up to us until we really won’t have a place to call home anymore.”

As SF State leads the way, other universities may soon follow, ensuring that future graduates are equipped to navigate, address, and advocate for climate solutions in their careers and communities.

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