SEA homeschoolers

The Science of Climate Change Poster – SEA Books & More

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Recommended Ages

2nd–7th grades (Elementary to Middle School)

The Science of Climate Change Poster from SEA Books & More is a colorful, classroom-ready visual that summarizes key climate concepts in student-friendly language. Developed by the same team behind The Science of Climate Change curriculum, it illustrates topics like the greenhouse effect, carbon cycles, and human impact in clear diagrams that support both visual and verbal learners. Parents and teachers like having a quick reference on the wall that they can point to during discussions or labs, reinforcing vocabulary and big-picture connections. While it doesn’t replace a textbook, the poster is an inexpensive tool that keeps climate science visible and top-of-mind in homeschool rooms and co-ops.

This is ideal for visual learners in roughly grades 2–7 and for families already studying climate science who want a one‑glance reminder of key concepts and vocabulary.

Pros

Homeschoolers appreciate this poster as a colorful, secular, classroom-ready visual summary of greenhouse effect, carbon cycle, and human impact that pairs perfectly with Blair Lee’s Science of Climate Change course or stands alone as a reference on the wall. 

Cons

Because it’s just a poster, it doesn’t replace a full curriculum, may feel text-heavy for very young kids if printed small, and won’t satisfy families looking for a faith-based or climate‑skeptical perspective.

Some ESA and charter programs that fund secular science materials will reimburse purchases from SEA Books & More when ordered through an approved vendor account. Families should check local rules about posters and supplemental materials.

$2.99

The Science of Climate Change Poster – SEA Books & More
$3.00 USD

Skills

What kids will learn

The Science of Climate Change Poster – SEA Books & More Mission

The mission of The Science of Climate Change poster is to give kids and families a visually engaging overview of the key ideas behind global warming and climate change—what it is, why it’s happening, and what we can do about it. Designed as a quick reference, it reinforces vocabulary and concepts from Blair Lee’s hands-on course while sparking curiosity every time a student walks past it. 

The Science of Climate Change Poster – SEA Books & More Story

This poster was developed as a companion to The Science of Climate Change: A Hands-On Course after teachers and homeschoolers asked for something they could hang on the wall to anchor discussions. SEA Books & More worked with Blair Lee to condense the course’s big ideas and data into kid-friendly visuals that still honor the underlying science. For many families, it’s the piece that keeps climate science “in the air” long after a formal lesson or lab is finished.

About Modular Learning

FAQ: Additional Details about The Science of Climate Change Poster – SEA Books & More

Walk into the room and you’ll see a bright, information-rich poster showing Earth systems, greenhouse gases, and climate impacts. During a lesson, you and your child stand in front of it tracing arrows with your fingers, adding sticky notes with questions, or playing “find the term” as you talk about weather, climate, and what kids notice in their own environment.

This large poster serves as a visual spine for a climate change mini-unit or ongoing study. Families hang it in the learning area and use it to introduce key vocabulary, processes, and big-picture concepts, often pairing it with readings, videos, and the matching consumables packet so kids repeatedly see and interact with the same core ideas.

Parents are the guides here: they choose when to reference the poster, ask questions, connect it to news or local observations, and decide whether to layer in worksheets or projects. Older students can self-initiate review by standing at the poster to study vocabulary before quizzes.

No formal prerequisites. It’s most effective once children can read short labels and interpret basic diagrams, but younger kids can still benefit as adults point and explain in simple language.

This poster offers a visual overview of climate concepts, making it a helpful anchor for visual thinkers, autistic learners, and students with language processing challenges. Families can refer to it during discussions, using it to ground abstract ideas in simple diagrams without requiring long reading.

The Science of Climate Change poster offers a big-picture visual overview of key concepts, which can help sensory-sensitive learners by presenting information in a single, organized image instead of dense text.

Returns and exchanges for the poster are handled by SEA Books & More or the retailer where you buy it. In general, unused posters in resaleable condition can be returned within a limited timeframe; damaged or hung posters are typically not eligible.

It’s not a good fit for families without easy printing options, or for those who prefer to keep climate content minimal or entirely hands‑on without reference charts.

Alternatives and complements include NASA climate posters, infographics from government science sites, or other secular earth‑science charts combined with hands‑on labs.

The publisher can update the design in new printings to reflect current data and terminology, and may release companion resources or revised guides over time while the core graphic remains stable.

Print the poster large if possible, hang it at kid eye‑level, and refer to it often—have your learner trace pathways (like “follow the carbon”) with a finger when new ideas come up in books, videos, or news stories.

Contact form

Meet Blair

Blair Lee, M.S., is the scientist and curriculum writer behind The Science of Climate Change course and poster, as well as the founder of SEA Homeschoolers. With degrees in biology and chemistry and a master’s in chemistry from UC San Diego, she brings deep subject-matter expertise to her materials while always asking how concepts can be made concrete for kids through experiments and models. A fun fact: Blair originally launched the climate course through a Kickstarter campaign, rallying a community of science-loving families who wanted accurate, age-appropriate climate education.