LSF's Build-Your-Own Virtual Youth Forum
Welcome to LSF’s Build-Your-Own Youth Forum! This page is your home base for all the events, materials & links that are part of this Forum.
Our Youth Forums are designed to engage students in sustainability issues, equip them with skills and knowledge, and empower them to take action. Use our teacher resources, student workshops, Action Project grant, and more to kickstart a Climate Action Project with your students and make a real difference in your community!
Learn more about how the Youth Forum works:
Please reach out to genevieve@LSF-LST.ca if you have any questions or feedback!
How do I build my own Youth Forum?
Complete your Youth Forum in 6 easy steps:
- Have your students each complete the short pre-Forum survey
- Take advantage of the Climate Change 101 course and our selection of teacher PD workshop recordings (both optional)
- Complete a minimum of 3 student workshop recordings with your students
- Complete LSF’s Action Project Planning workshop recording with your students
- Make your Action Project plan & submit your Action Project grant request by April 2026
- Take action in your school or community and complete your Final Report by May 29, 2026
Watch this video below for more details:
1. Before You Begin
We need your help! Before you start any Youth Forum activities with your students, please have each student fill out our short survey. We need this information for our funders. We can’t continue the Youth Forums without it!
Please forward this link to your students and ask them each to complete it ASAP: www.LSF-LST.ca/forms/cc-student-survey
2. Getting Started
Climate Change 101: This course designed by our partners at Let’s Talk Science will bring your students up to speed on climate change knowledge before starting the Forum workshops!
The climate change 101 course is optional, but recommended. It’s a great place to start before digging into the other workshops!
3. Student Workshops
Explore our climate action topics with your students!
To be eligible for a student Action Project grant, you’ll need to watch at least 3 of the student workshop recordings below.
Please note that the grade levels listed are merely a suggestion. You are welcome to watch any recording with your students!
Workshop Description: Lets learn about the interconnection with the forest and how this ecosystem collaborates, is kind, and is generous. How might we consider plants as our teachers and reclaim the interconnection of our more-than-human-kin who guide us and also give up their lives for us. Why are the Rooted Nations (trees) so important, and how might they be able to help and support us?
Prep/Materials Needed:
- Students should have paper & a writing utensil
- Watch this overview (2.5 min) of Mycorrhiza – the living community between plants and fungi
- Check out The Mother Tree Project, a research initiative working with BC First Nations to explore innovative strategies for enhancing carbon storage, protecting biodiversity, and promoting forest regeneration in a rapidly changing environment
> Watch this workshop recording
LoriAnn Bird is an Indigenous Metis herbalist and educator who introduces folks to wild, native and medicinal plants, sharing knowledge and the interconnection with all that exists.
Workshop Description:
Learn more about Let’s Talk Science
Workshop Description:
Learn more about Canada Learning Code
Workshop Description: In this session, students will explore the future of renewable energy and electric vehicles. Workshop participants will have the opportunity to learn, expand and test their knowledge through this interactive session on the differences between renewable and non-renewable energy sources.
Materials/Prep:
Learn more about GreenLearning
Workshop Description:
Materials/Prep:
- Computer/Tablet
- Create a free Scratch account at scratch.mit.edu/join
Learn more about Brilliant Labs
Workshop Description:
Lichen is a surprising organism that can tell us a lot about the environment around us! In this session, we will explore what lichen is, where we can find it, and how we can study lichen as a bioindicator for air quality while we make connections between air pollutants that impact air quality and those that contribute to climate change. We will explore climate action through monitoring lichen for changes in air quality in neighbourhoods and exploring how active transportation can support a healthy environment.
Learn more about the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA)
Workshop Description:
Learn more about Plug’n Drive
Workshop Description:
In this session, students will explore the issue of single-use plastics and the importance of transitioning from a linear to a circular economy. Based on GreenLearning’s Eco 360 program, our “ReMaker Space: Single-Use Plastics” workshop encourages students to think critically about the sustainability of everyday items and discover innovative ways to reduce plastic waste and promote circular solutions.
Materials/Prep:
- Educator Guide
- Handout (use fillable PDF or print)
Learn more about GreenLearning
Workshop Description:
This interactive workshop will explore climate change impacts and solutions through the Climate Atlas of Canada, an engaging online tool for students, researchers, decision-makers, and communities. As an example, we will look at the health impacts of climate change and students will have the opportunity to participate in a “treasure hunt” to find the answers on the site themselves.
Materials/Prep:
- Writing utensil & paper
- Internet-enabled device – 1 per student or shared
Learn more about the Prairie Climate Centre and the Climate Atlas of Canada
Workshop Description: In this sessions, students will explore the role that policy plays in climate action, and how misinformation can impact our perspectives on policy. Students will be challenged to think critically about policy, and consider how policies may have unintended consequences.
Materials/Prep:
- Students should have paper and writing utensils ready for their brainstorming.
Extra Resources:
- GreenLearning’s Decoding Carbon: A Climate Policy Quest – take the Decoding Carbon Challenge!
- Skeptical Science site
- GreenLearning’s Climate Policy Worksheet
Learn more about GreenLearning
Description:
4. Action Project Planning
It’s time to start thinking about the climate-related Action Project your students wish to undertake!
To be eligible for a student Action Project grant, you’ll need to watch this Action Project planning workshop recording below.
Workshop Description: So you’ve participated in the workshops and learned about all kinds of climate issues… Now what? Our Action Project Planning workshop will show you what an Action Project looks like and help you consider your interests and skills, your sphere of influence, and the root causes of the issue so you can take on the best Action Project ever!
Materials/Prep:
- Please print this worksheet (double-sided) – 1 copy per student
- Internet-enabled devices for Kahoot
Next Steps:
5. Request Your Grant
Have you:
- watched at least 3 student workshop recordings?
- watched LSF’s Action Project Planning workshop?
- prepared your Action Project plan with your students?
If yes, you’re ready to request your $200 Youth Forum grant!
Remember, you have to report back on your Action Project by May 29, 2026. So we recommend requesting your grant before April 2026!
6. Complete your Final Report
Done your Action Project? Tell us about it!
Final Reports are due May 29, 2026 and will ask for:
- copies of receipts for all purchases up to $200
- photos of your students in action!
- description of project activities
- project reach (# of students, teachers, community members reached) and impacts (e.g. # of trees planted, # of kg’s of waste diverted from landfill, area of land planted, etc. etc.)
- your post on www.OurCanadaProject.ca
You can preview the report questions here.
Teacher Resources
PD Workshop Library
These PD recordings are intended to help guide you through the process of integrating climate learning & outdoor learning into your classroom, connecting your curriculum to the SDGs and taking on a student-led Action Project.
- Basic Climate Change Science: video | slides
- Climate Change Education Strategies: video | slides
- Resources for Climate Change Education: video | slides
- Tools and Resources for Sustainable Outdoor Learning with the Outdoor Learning School & Store (K-12)
- Learning Through Action: Tools and Resources for Student Led Sustainability Projects with the Outdoor Learning School & Store (K-12)
- Sustainability: The Educator’s Playbook (K-8)
- Connecting to the UN’s SDGs: Resources from R4R and Ingenium (K-12)
Additional Resources
- Check out our database of over 1,900 curriculum-connected classroom resources on R4R
- Empowering Learners in a Warming World climate change inquiry guide
- Engaging Students in Sustainable Action Projects guide
- Action Project inspiration on Our Canada Project
- Green Jobs: Adapting to our Changing Climate video series
Action Project Final Report
Done your Action Project? Tell us about it!
Final Reports are due May 24, 2023 and will ask for:
- copies of receipts for all purchases up to $500
- photos of your students in action!
- description of project activities
- project reach (# of students, teachers, community members reached) and impacts (e.g. # of trees planted, # of kg’s of waste diverted from landfill, area of land planted, etc. etc.)
- your post on www.OurCanadaProject.ca
Feedback Form
We encourage students & teachers to offer feedback on each workshop using our form!
Our Canada Project
Our Canada Project (OCP) inspires youth to be responsible citizens and gives youth a platform to share their voice. Check out some of the great projects we funded last year!
Fresh Falls Market is a school-run produce market, to bring healthy, affordable food to their school and community.
James Morden Public School, Niagara Falls, ON – Grade 6/7
Tall Grass Prairie Pollinators Corridor is a project to help restore a 2′ x 180′ corridor on the school property to establish a tallgrass prairie ecosystem. This project enabled students to apply their knowledge of biodiversity and ecosystems outside the classroom.
Linden Meadows School, Winnipeg, MB – Grade 5-8
Food for Thought – Sustainable Urban Farming project used hydroponic technology to grow food and create HOME (Healthy Options Made Easy) buckets, affordable bi-weekly food parcels, to reduce the carbon footprint created by importing produce into their northern Ontario community.
Kapuskasing District High School, Kapuskasing, ON – Grade 9 -12
This project was undertaken with the financial support of the Government of Canada
