The January/February 2025 issue of Skeptical Inquirer ("the magazine for science and reason," published by the Center for Inquiry) is devoted to "Clear Thinking about Climate" under the guest editorship of Bill Nye "The Science Guy" — and a number of the authors have connections to NCSE.
NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch contributed "A Break in the Weather for American Middle School Climate Education" (subscription required), discussing the research from NCSE's Investigating Science Education program presented in "Climate change education in U.S. middle schools: changes over five pivotal years."
Michael E. Mann, a member of NCSE's board of directors, and Peter J. Hotez contributed "A Triple Threat to Humanity: Climate Change, Pandemics, and Anti-Science," which gives a preview of their forthcoming coauthored book Science under Siege: How to Fight the Five Most Powerful Forces That Threaten Our World.
Bertha Vazquez, a recent recipient of NCSE's Friend of Darwin award, contributed "Misconceptions About Climate Change: An Educator's Guide" (subscription required), which gives a preview of her forthcoming book (coauthored with Kimi Waite and Lauren Madden) What Teachers Want to Know about Teaching Climate Change.
And John Cook, a founder of Skeptical Science, which received NCSE's Friend of the Planet award, and a collaborator on NCSE's climate change lesson sets, contributed "The Cranky Uncle Game: A Way to Logic-Check Misinformation about Climate Change," which discusses Cook's game that uses cartoons and critical thinking to build resilience against misinformation.