Science a la Joe Camel
By Laurie
David
Sunday, November 26, 2006; B01 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/24/AR2006112400789_pf.html
At
hundreds of screenings this year of "An Inconvenient Truth," the
first thing many viewers said after the lights came up was that every student
in every school in the United States needed to see this movie.
The
producers of former vice president Al Gore's film about global warming, myself
included, certainly agreed. So the company that made the documentary decided to
offer 50,000 free DVDs to the National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) for
educators to use in their classrooms. It seemed like a no-brainer.
The
teachers had a different idea: Thanks but no thanks, they said.
In their
e-mail rejection, they expressed concern that other "special
interests" might ask to distribute materials, too; they said they didn't
want to offer "political" endorsement of the film; and they saw
"little, if any, benefit to NSTA or its members" in accepting the
free DVDs.
Gore,
however, is not running for office, and the film's theatrical run is long since
over. As for classroom benefits, the movie has been enthusiastically endorsed
by leading climate scientists worldwide, and is required viewing for all
students in Norway and Sweden.
Still,
maybe the NSTA just being extra cautious. But there was one more curious
argument in the e-mail: Accepting the DVDs, they wrote, would place
"unnecessary risk upon the [NSTA] capital campaign, especially certain
targeted supporters." One of those supporters, it turns out, is the Exxon
Mobil Corp.
That's the
same Exxon Mobil that for more than a decade has done everything possible to
muddle public understanding of global warming and stifle any serious effort to
solve it. It has run ads in leading newspapers (including this one) questioning
the role of manmade emissions in global warming, and financed the work of a
small band of scientific skeptics who have tried to challenge the consensus
that heat-trapping pollution is drastically altering our atmosphere. The
company spends millions to support groups such as the Competitive Enterprise
Institute that aggressively pressure lawmakers to oppose emission limits.
It's bad
enough when a company tries to sell junk science to a bunch of grown-ups. But,
like a tobacco company using cartoons to peddle cigarettes, Exxon Mobil is
going after our kids, too.
And it
has been doing so for longer than you may think. NSTA says it has received $6
million from the company since 1996, mostly for the association's
"Building a Presence for Science" program, an electronic networking initiative
intended to "bring standards-based teaching and learning" into
schools, according to the NSTA Web site. Exxon Mobil has a representative on
the group's corporate advisory board. And in 2003, NSTA gave the company an
award for its commitment to science education.
So much for special interests and implicit
endorsements.
In the
past year alone, according to its Web site, Exxon Mobil's foundation gave $42
million to key organizations that influence the way children learn about
science, from kindergarten until they graduate from high school.
And Exxon
Mobil isn't the only one getting in on the action. Through textbooks, classroom
posters and teacher seminars, the oil industry, the coal industry and other
corporate interests are exploiting shortfalls in education funding by using a
small slice of their record profits to buy themselves
a classroom soapbox.
NSTA's list of corporate donors
also includes Shell Oil and the American Petroleum Institute (API), which funds
NSTA's Web site on the science of energy. There,
students can find a section called "Running on Oil" and read a page
that touts the industry's environmental track record -- citing improvements
mostly attributable to laws that the companies fought tooth and nail, by the
way -- but makes only vague references to spills or pollution. NSTA has
distributed a video produced by API called "You Can't Be
Cool Without Fuel," a shameless pitch for oil dependence.
The
education organization also hosts an annual convention -- which is described on
Exxon Mobil's Web site as featuring "more than 450 companies and
organizations displaying the most current textbooks, lab equipment, computer
hardware and software, and teaching enhancements." The company
"regularly displays" its "many . . . education materials"
at the exhibition. John Borowski, a science teacher
at North Salem High School in Salem, Ore., was dismayed by NSTA's
partnerships with industrial polluters when he attended the association's
annual convention this year and witnessed hundreds of teachers and school
administrators walk away with armloads of free corporate lesson plans.
Along
with propaganda challenging global warming from Exxon Mobil, the curricular
offerings included lessons on forestry provided by Weyerhaeuser and
International Paper, Borowski says, and the benefits
of genetic engineering courtesy of biotech giant Monsanto.
"The
materials from the American Petroleum Institute and the other corporate
interests are the worst form of a lie: omission," Borowski
says. "The oil and coal guys won't address global warming,
and the timber industry papers over clear-cuts."
An API
memo leaked to the media as long ago as 1998 succinctly explains why the
association is angling to infiltrate the classroom: "Informing
teachers/students about uncertainties in climate science will begin to erect
barriers against further efforts to impose Kyoto-like measures in the
future."
So, how
is any of this different from showing Gore's movie in the classroom? The answer
is that neither Gore nor Participant Productions, which made the movie, stands
to profit a nickel from giving away DVDs, and we aren't facing millions of
dollars in lost business from limits on global-warming pollution and a shift to
cleaner, renewable energy.
It's hard
to say whether NSTA is a bad guy here or just a sorry victim of tight education
budgets. And we don't pretend that a two-hour movie is a substitute for a
rigorous science curriculum. Students should expect, and parents should demand,
that educators present an honest and unbiased look at the true state of
knowledge about the challenges of the day.
As for
Exxon Mobil -- which just began a fuzzy advertising campaign that trumpets
clean energy and low emissions -- this story shows that slapping green stripes
on a corporate tiger doesn't change the beast within. The company is still
playing the same cynical game it has for years.
While
NSTA and Exxon Mobil ponder the moral lesson they're teaching with all this,
there are 50,000 DVDs sitting in a Los Angeles warehouse, waiting to be distributed.
In the meantime, Mom and Dad may want to keep a sharp eye on their kids'
science homework.
Laurie David, a producer of "An Inconvenient
Truth," is a Natural Resources Defense Council trustee and founder of
StopGlobalWarming.org.