logo
How Irish classrooms can deal with warmer weather and higher temperatures

How Irish classrooms can deal with warmer weather and higher temperatures

RTÉ News​19-05-2025
Analysis: Parents, educators and policymakers must treat classroom heat not as a seasonal inconvenience, but as a pressing public health issue
Ireland is known for its mild and wet summers, but classrooms across the country are experiencing something different this May. The current sustained spell of warmth and dryness is anything but typical. Temperatures are regularly reaching and surpassing 17°C, well above the long-term May average temperature of 10.5 °C. At the same time, we have been having weather since March that is warmer and drier than usual and the lower rainfall inhibits natural cooling.
This unseasonal warmth is part of a longer-term trend. Last May was Ireland's warmest on record with an average temperature of 13.08 °C. This is testing schools built for a cooler climate. For children, whose bodies cannot regulate heat as efficiently as adults, such conditions are not just uncomfortable, but they can become a health risk.
From RTÉ Radio 1's Today With Claire Byrne, should more schools consider outdoor classrooms?
Why heat hits children harder
Children face unique vulnerabilities in overheated classrooms. Their developing thermoregulatory system and higher surface-area-to-body-mass ratio make them prone to dehydration and heat stress, even at moderate temperatures. Classrooms are much more densely occupied than, say, an office space, which means they trap more heat.
Prolonged exposure to warm conditions can lead to nausea, headaches and dizziness. Poor ventilation in classrooms, which can be a reason for warmer classroom temperatures, also worsens respiratory issues that a child may have.
In addition to health and discomfort risks, there is also the matter of a suitable learning space. A summary of research evidence shows that when classroom temperatures rise from 20 to 30 °C, children's performance in learning related tasks decline by about 2% for every degree Celsius.
From RTÉ Radio 1's Today with Claire Byrne, how extreme heat affects the brain
A climate shift our schools were not built for
Met Éireann's data paints a stark picture of changing norms. This May, forecasts predict averages could reach 14.9° C. The warmer temperature is also being accompanied by longer warm spells, meaning buildings and surroundings do not get a chance to cool down, further enhancing the risk for students.
Irish schools are built for cold winters, so most do not have mechanical cooling systems. Like many schools in the EU, they rely on natural ventilation. With the warming climate, the effectiveness of natural ventilation is impacted. Retrofitted insulation, intended to combat winter cold, traps summer heat as well. With the school years ending in June, the months of May and June can be especially challenging.
How schools can adapt
In the short term, schools can take low-cost steps to mitigate risks. Opening windows overnight to flush out heat can be useful. Using cross ventilation – opening doors and windows – during cooler mornings is also effective. Installing temporary window reflectors (like cardboard coated in foil) can reduce the incoming solar radiation, reducing daytime temperatures. Using indoor air quality monitors to keep track of indoor temperature in real time can help us plan and minimize heat exposure risks.
From RTÉ Radio 1's Brendan O'Connor Show, dealing with classroom temperatures
Scheduling outdoor activities before 11am or after 3pm avoids peak heat and UV exposure. Dehydration is a significant risk for children, as they may not recognize the need to drink water regularly, especially in dry weather, so providing chilled water stations is a useful measure.
Architectural changes are critical for futureproofing the classrooms. External shades and high-performance glazing can cut down solar heat gains. Replacing asphalt playgrounds with grass or cool pavements helps lower surface temperatures. These spaces are safer for outdoor breaks taken by the children.
What parents can do
Parents can help by sending children to school with insulated water bottles and frozen fruit, and by choosing light-coloured, loose-fitting uniforms made from breathable fabrics. Schools can also provide more flexibility in uniform requirements. Another important aspect is supporting school boards' efforts to secure funding for classroom retrofits.
By integrating Met Éireann's climate projections into school design, policymakers can future-proof classrooms against rising temperatures
To prepare for future scenarios, schools and parents can co-create heat action plans and gradually adopt measures. Designated staff and parents can check on progress and ensure that measures are maintained. Some actions can be conducted with children's cooperation as STEM-related activities, helping them understand climate change and building design. Awareness activities, conducted with researchers, can benefit both children and teachers.
A need for systemic change
Ireland's climate is changing, and so must its classroom infrastructure. While individual actions help, systemic solutions are urgent. Met Éireann's projections indicate that May temperatures could rise by an additional 1.5°C by the middle of this century (2041–2060), making passive cooling systems and revised building codes essential.
While immediate measures like hydration and schedule changes can mitigate risks, systemic investment in resilient classroom infrastructure is important. By integrating Met Éireann's climate projections into school design standards, policymakers can move further to future-proof classrooms against escalating temperatures.
Parents, educators and policymakers must treat classroom heat not as a seasonal inconvenience, but as a pressing public health issue. The goal is to adapt classroom design so that they can be safe havens for learning, no matter what the weather brings.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Met Éireann issues Status Orange rain and thunderstorm warning with risk of flooding
Met Éireann issues Status Orange rain and thunderstorm warning with risk of flooding

Sunday World

timean hour ago

  • Sunday World

Met Éireann issues Status Orange rain and thunderstorm warning with risk of flooding

The alert, covering counties Dublin, Louth and Meath will come into force at midnight on Monday and last until 2pm Met Éireann has issued a Status Orange rain and thunderstorm warning for three counties tomorrow with risk of widespread surface flooding. The alert, covering counties Dublin, Louth and Meath will come into force at midnight on Monday and last until 2pm. Impacts include 'very difficult' travelling conditions, lightning damage and 'very poor' visibility. A Status Yellow rain warning is also in place for Kildare, Wicklow and Monaghan from midnight on Monday until 2pm. The national forecaster said potential impacts include localised flooding, poor visibility and difficult travelling conditions. Meanwhile, the UK Met Office has issued a Status Yellow rain warning for Antrim, Armagh and Down between 6pm tonight and 6pm on Monday. A Status Orange rain warning has also been issued for Antrim, Armagh and Down from 11pm tonight until 8am on Monday. There will be scattered heavy showers and longer spells of rain, especially across parts of the midlands and mid-west this evening. However, temperatures of 17 to 22 degrees are expected before another rather damp night tonight, with rain heaviest across the east of the country as temperatures hit lows of 13 to 15 degrees. The new week will start with further showers, heaviest over parts of Leinster and east Ulster with spot flooding possible before conditions brighten in parts of the west and south tomorrow evening. Highest temperatures of 15 to 20 degrees are expected, before another mild and rather wet day on Tuesday when temperatures hit highs of 16 to 19 degrees despite widespread showers in the afternoon. Met Éireann expects the coming days to feature 'generally mixed conditions' to start the week, forecasting 'showers or longer spells of, at times heavy, rain with spot flooding possible'. There will be fewer showers by midweek. Sunny spells and scattered showers are expected on Wednesday, with rain becoming less heavy than previous days and more isolated by evening as highs of 15 to 19 degrees are forecast. A largely dry day is on the cards for the Thursday, broken by a few light showers as highs hit between 17 to 20 degrees. Met Éireann says an 'Atlantic westerly regime looks set to dominate' for the days that follow. "The best of the drier and brighter weather will be in the east and south with cloudier conditions and a greater chance of rain or showers as well as breezier conditions in the west and north,' they said. "Temperatures look set to remain close to the seasonal norm.' Heavy rain in Dublin. Photo: Collins Today's News in 90 Seconds - July 20th

There's a lot of chat right now about quitting hormonal contraception. What's going on?
There's a lot of chat right now about quitting hormonal contraception. What's going on?

The Journal

time5 hours ago

  • The Journal

There's a lot of chat right now about quitting hormonal contraception. What's going on?

'BEST DECISION EVER. I love knowing my body is just doing what it needs to do naturally.' 'I'm off the pill now about three years and I felt that cloud lift and everything is so much clearer.' 'Took my [contraceptive implant] bar out after 10 years and I've never looked back.' When social media content creator Clóda Scanlon posted on Instagram late last year about her decision to come off hormonal contraception, she received many public and private messages of support from other women who had done the same. It's almost three years since Ireland's free contraception scheme was launched. At a time when contraception is more accessible than ever, some young women are increasingly wary of artificial hormones' effects. Some are opting out. Up-to-date Irish data on uptake of prescription and hormonal contraception is not currently available. However, there are clues that a backlash against hormonal contraception – the pill, the patch, the implant and most intrauterine coils – may be under way. The full implications of that in Ireland are not yet clear. International data suggests an emerging trend in developed countries. Analysis for the UNFPA, the UN's sexual and reproductive health agency, found hormonal contraception use on the increase in only one of nine European and North American countries for which recent data was available. In six it was declining. Doctors working in women's health in Ireland told The Journal that despite the availability of free contraception, they still meet women who do not plan to go on it, or who are concerned about effects they have experienced while taking it. For Scanlon and other women in their 20s who spoke to The Journal about their decision to come off hormonal contraception, the growing conversation among women about side effects and alternatives is a logical continuation of the empowerment of women that contraception itself brought, 40 years after it was fully legalised in Ireland in 1985. 'The conversations are changing,' Scanlon said. 'Female health is really, really becoming a topic of conversation – and thank god, it's about time.' Ciara McCarthy, a Cork GP who is the clinical lead for women's health at the HSE and Irish Council of General Practitioners, said: 'It is certainly a conversation that seems to be happening now.' She suggests two factors may be at play. First, there's what women are seeing online, some of which, on TikTok in particular, she characterises, as misinformation and disinformation. Secondly, there's the reality that some women are more sensitive than others to the side effects of hormonal contraception. Other doctors who spoke to The Journal made the same inferences. The UNFPA said it can't draw definitive conclusions about the influence of online content on the apparent decline in uptake of hormonal contraception in some countries, but it said this has been raised with it anecdotally. 'Cost is not a factor' Shirley McQuaid, medical director of the Well Woman Centre in Dublin, said there is 'definitely a move away from hormonal contraception', evidenced by a surge in the popularity of the copper (non-hormonal) intrauterine coil. A decade ago, this was an unusual choice among women attending the Well Woman Centre, which specialises in family planning and sexual health but its popularity has steadily increased. This increase has happened despite the fact that the copper coil was not reimbursable on the free scheme until early 2023. The full cost of consultation, fitting and the device itself is almost €300. Copper coils as a percentage of all intrauterine contraception fitted at the Well Woman centre 2005-2022: there has been a steady increase. Well Woman Centre Well Woman Centre The copper coil is not a universally suitable or attractive alternative to hormonal contraception, however. It can cause longer and heavier periods. McQuaid said that she is seeing sexually active women 'every day' who don't want to get pregnant but aren't taking contraception. Was that always the case, say 10 or 15 years ago? 'It was, but I had always thought it was related to the fact that access to contraception wasn't freely available,' McQuaid said. 'I had always assumed that cost was a factor. But there is still an issue, even though cost is not a factor. Now, some people just say they don't want to get pregnant but they don't actively do anything to prevent it.' Side effects No-one disputes the fact that hormonal contraception can cause side effects. However, some side effects may not be officially recognised. For example, the NHS website states that there is not enough evidence to show that headaches, nausea, mood swings, weight gain, sore breasts or acne are caused by hormonal contraception. This will seem bizarre to many women, who have either experienced one or more of these side effects themselves, or whose friends have. McCarthy, of the ICGP and HSE, said contraceptive care needs to be very carefully individualised. 'We can look at the guidelines, where they'll say there's insufficient evidence that such and such causes mood changes or weight gain, and on a population level that may be true. But on an individual level, women can experience significant side effects and some women are more sensitive than others,' McCarthy said. Psychologists in UCC interviewed 11 Irish women about their experience on the pill. They found that while the women felt more in control of their fertility, they experienced both physical and mental side effects. The women did not feel this experience was taken seriously by doctors. Caitríona Henchion, medical director of the Irish Family Planning Association, agreed with McCarthy that hormonal contraception 'does not suit everyone' and some people seem to be more sensitive to negative effects. These are usually associated with progestogens – synthetic forms of progesterone. 'However, the majority, who are likely to have little or no adverse effects, are being frightened off even trying it,' Henchion warned. 'Many fears are based on totally false claims made, usually on social media.' Advertisement Dr Caitríona Henchion Andres Poveda Andres Poveda She said hormonal contraception is not only an effective way of avoiding unintended pregnancy but can also reduce period pain and cause lighter bleeding, and significantly reduce the risk of developing ovarian cancer. Doctors say that if women have a poor experience on one pill – for instance, low mood, associated with progesterone, or breast tenderness, associated with oestrogen – trying another pill or form of composition is likely to help. 'Oftentimes, women won't have an issue with the second pill they try,' said McQuaid, of the Well Women Centre. However, women The Journal interviewed about their decision to discontinue hormonal contraception spoke unhappily of being automatically told by doctors to try a different pill or form of contraception when they raised concerns. They said they didn't like the idea of taking artificial hormones, and they found it easier to understand their own mood and feelings when they were able to track their normal menstrual cycle (most hormonal contraception other than the hormonal coil prevents ovulation). There seems to be a sense in which women are further alienated from hormonal contraception when they feel the health system is not listening to their concerns about it. Trainee clinical psychologist Ailsa McGuinness, who led the UCC research on Irish women's experience of taking the pill, said that while the pill is physically safe, women feel that there is not enough research on or understanding of its mental health impact. She suggests the gap that has opened up between women's experience, which they share informally with each other, and official medical advice and messaging may be where the online 'wellness' industry has crept in with its alternative views on contraception. Frequently, in social media discussions of contraception, including among Irish women, someone will advocate using menstrual cycle-tracking apps such as Natural Cycles as a form of contraception. This particular app has been promoted as contraception by at least one Irish alternative health practitioner with a large social media following. Natural Cycles, which also encourages women to check their temperature to know where they are in their cycle, said it has a small Irish user base but is not actively marketing itself here. It claims to be 93% effective with typical use and 98% with perfect use, and claims to be 'just as effective' for women with an irregular cycle. Claims that cycle tracking can be over 90% effective in preventing pregnancy are not supported by Irish health authorities. Natural Cycles Natural Cycles In 2018, the British Advertising Standards Authority banned a Natural Cycle ad billing the product as a 'highly accurate' contraceptive tool, ruling that the claims made were misleading and the effectiveness of the app exaggerated. The Irish government's new sexual health strategy states that unplanned pregnancy rates for 'natural family planning methods' are estimated at 24-25%, and warns that there is a 'clear need' for more public information on cycle tracking as a form of contraception. Henchion, of the IFPA, said: 'I have met several women using period tracker apps for contraception. Unfortunately, the context in which I usually meet them is unintended pregnancy. 'If an unintended pregnancy would not be a crisis and if you have a very regular cycle, it is perfectly reasonable to use a tracker app instead of contraception. But the failure rate is significantly higher than with any modern contraceptive method. Even with a very regular cycle, ovulation may vary from one month to the next,' she said. Social media If there is an emerging trend of more women opting out of hormonal contraception, it seems very likely that social media is playing a role. Research analysing YouTube vlogs about hormonal contraception, for example, has found they are disproportionately about discontinuing it. One 2023 study , based on interviews with women, concluded that social media shapes their sense that there are hazards associated with the pill, shifting the perceived risk from questions around the reliability and basic safety of the drug to questions of individual physical and mental wellbeing. Young women interviewed by The Journal who have come off contraception were self-aware about this aspect of social media: they could see that it individualised discussion of hormonal contraception to particular women's experience – and they saw this as a positive. They viewed social media as playing an empowering role in enabling women to share their own experiences and decisions with others. Olwyn Hanley (29) was on various forms of hormonal contraception from age 17 to 24. She believes social media has given women both information and education. 'I feel like the generation before us were very accepting because they didn't have that access to information online. They thought, 'if the doctors say so, it must be right, and we'll just go by that'. I think we're very much a generation who asks questions,' Hanley said. Hanley said that being able to track her menstrual cycle and understand why her mood might be different at different times of the month has been beneficial. She is in a long-term relationship and uses condoms. There may be other factors at play, not least the other side of the story when it comes to pregnancy or avoiding it: men. One 26-year-old woman from Cork said her boyfriend has put no pressure on her to go back on contraception. They use condoms. 'I think the men in this generation are more educated,' she said. Clóda Scanlon, the 28-year-old whose Instagram video on her experience of coming off the contraceptive implant after 10 years received a warm response from other young women, said she has no plans to go back on. Like other women The Journal spoke to, she feels more in tune with her body now that she is tracking her normal menstrual cycle. 'My feelings have more clarity,' she said. 'There would have been times when I would have maybe struggled with my mental health, and I kind of wonder, would the [artificial] hormones have had an effect in some way, because I wasn't actually feeling my true emotions, my body wasn't taking its natural course?' she said. A clearer picture of what is happening in Ireland will soon emerge. The next Healthy Ireland Survey, to be published this year, will contain an update on contraceptive use, while the University of Galway will conduct a major survey for the HSE in 2027. McCarthy, of the ICGP and HSE, advises women who are going to a medical consultation about contraception to write out what they've been on before, how long they took it for and what issues they experienced, to help them to build as clear a picture as possible. To anyone experiencing side effects she says: 'Talk to your GP: they want to find a method that is going to be right for you.' Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal

Met Éireann issues Status Orange rain and thunderstorm warning with risk of flooding
Met Éireann issues Status Orange rain and thunderstorm warning with risk of flooding

Irish Independent

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Met Éireann issues Status Orange rain and thunderstorm warning with risk of flooding

The alert, covering counties Dublin, Louth and Meath will come into force at midnight on Monday and last until 2pm. Impacts include 'very difficult' travelling conditions, lightning damage and 'very poor' visibility. A Status Yellow rain warning is also in place for Kildare, Wicklow and Monaghan from midnight on Monday until 2pm. The national forecaster said potential impacts include localised flooding, poor visibility and difficult travelling conditions. Meanwhile, the UK Met Office has issued a Status Yellow rain warning for Antrim, Armagh and Down between 6pm tonight and 6pm on Monday. A Status Orange rain warning has also been issued for Antrim, Armagh and Down from 11pm tonight until 8am on Monday. There will be scattered heavy showers and longer spells of rain, especially across parts of the midlands and mid-west this evening. However, temperatures of 17 to 22 degrees are expected before another rather damp night tonight, with rain heaviest across the east of the country as temperatures hit lows of 13 to 15 degrees. The new week will start with further showers, heaviest over parts of Leinster and east Ulster with spot flooding possible before conditions brighten in parts of the west and south tomorrow evening. Highest temperatures of 15 to 20 degrees are expected, before another mild and rather wet day on Tuesday when temperatures hit highs of 16 to 19 degrees despite widespread showers in the afternoon. Met Éireann expects the coming days to feature 'generally mixed conditions' to start the week, forecasting 'showers or longer spells of, at times heavy, rain with spot flooding possible'. There will be fewer showers by midweek. Sunny spells and scattered showers are expected on Wednesday, with rain becoming less heavy than previous days and more isolated by evening as highs of 15 to 19 degrees are forecast. A largely dry day is on the cards for the Thursday, broken by a few light showers as highs hit between 17 to 20 degrees. Met Éireann says an 'Atlantic westerly regime looks set to dominate' for the days that follow. "The best of the drier and brighter weather will be in the east and south with cloudier conditions and a greater chance of rain or showers as well as breezier conditions in the west and north,' they said. "Temperatures look set to remain close to the seasonal norm.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store