Ms Storer said the material will target primary school students "in a way a child can understand". They will include an e-Book with "10 climate facts to expose the climate change hoax" and "The Smart Scientist's Kit", described as "an educational resource for school children explaining how Australia is blessed with an excess of natural resources and that it doesn't make sense to try and stop the climate from changing". Ms Storer told The Sun-Herald and The Sunday Age that although she wanted to "let kids be kids", children were already being inundated with messages about climate change. "Whether we like it or not, the other side of the story is being shoved down their throats," she said. "It's already happening. The left have infiltrated our education systems. Any aware parent knows that their child is being taught the left's ideology. "All we're trying to do is give a counter-narrative of what we believe is the truth ... we want to see balance."

Ms Storer said Advance Australia would try to get the resources used in classrooms, and she had already spoken with like-minded educators. Liz Storer, the national director of activist group Advance Australia. "Unfortunately we can't actually place them in schools - that's a luxury enjoyed by the left only, it seems," she said. "They will be sent to schools, most definitely. We're hopeful of a take-up." Ms Storer, a former adviser to Liberal senator Zed Seselja, took over as national director of Advance Australia last year from Gerard Benedet, who had also been a Liberal staffer. The group's advisory council includes "storage king" Sam Kennard, former Deutsche Bank and ABC chairman Maurice Newman, education commentator and senior research fellow Kevin Donnelly (who co-chaired Tony Abbott's curriculum review in 2014) and the president of the Australian Jewish Association, David Adler.

Mr Newman has previously claimed that climate change is a hoax driven by the United Nations to end democracy and introduce authoritarian world government. In 2017, conservatives including Dr Donnelly led the charge against the Safe Schools program and related resources, which were aimed at reducing bullying of LGBTI students. He said the program was "a concerted and well resourced campaign enforcing an LGBTI sexuality and gender agenda". Ms Storer said she was also opposed the Safe Schools and Respectful Relationships programs in schools, and wanted the Left to "stop using [children's] formative years to indoctrinate them into any ideology, whether that's gender fluidity or climate alarmism". "Kids are kids," she said. "If adults tell them the sky is falling in, global warming is happening [and] a third of their class is going to be dead by 2050, they're going to believe them." Advance Australia bills itself as a centre-right version of GetUp, the progressive activist group. Ed Miller, GetUp's climate spokesman, described Advance Australia as a "fringe group who want to enter our classrooms and peddle lies about climate change".

"It's contemptible," he said. "Their extreme views have no place in schools or in politics." The NSW Department of Education said Advance Australia's resources would not be allowed in the state's public schools because they would fall foul of the government's policies and guidelines. "This includes the Controversial Issues in Schools policy which says that schools are neutral places for rational discourse and objective study, and discussions should not advance the interest of any particular group," a department spokesman said. "Under the Controversial Issues in Schools policy these materials from Advance Australia would not be deemed objective and therefore not permitted to be used in NSW public schools." In Victoria, principals generally enjoy greater autonomy to decide which resources to use in their schools. However, the state's policy on Sustainable Teaching and Learning Resources says resources used in public schools must not "offend students and the wider community due to their obscene, highly offensive or overly controversial nature".