Happy Green Philippines Activity Guide

Page 1

www.happygreenworld.org NON-RECYCLABLE BIODEGRADABLE RECYCLABLE Activity Guide
Green Philippines
Happy

Happy Green Philippines Activity Guide

Educational program on waste

Text copyright: © 2024 Happy Green World Foundation/ Marlou Bessem

Illustrations copyright: © 2024 Happy Green World Foundation/ Petra Houweling

This education material has been developed by Happy Green World foundation for the Rotary EndPlasticSoup Philippines initiative. It has been made available by Rotary Philippines, District 3790 and 3860, and the worldwide Rotary EndPlasticSoup initiative, to support primary and secondary schools to become ‘Green and plastic free Schools’.

EndPlasticSoup is a worldwide initiative for Rotary to solve and prevent the plastic pollution problem.

The Happy Green Philippines program on waste program consists of:

1. Activity Guide

2. Student Book

3. Game

For more information or placing your order for the Happy Green Philippines waste program please send an email to happygreenphilippines@endplasticsoup.org, info@youthtopia.world or info@happygreenworld.org.

Happy Green World Foundation

www.happygreenworld.org

info@happygreenworld.org

EndPlasticSoup

www.endplasticsoup.org

happygreenphilippines@endplasticsoup.org

Bye Bye Plastic Bags

www.byebyeplasticbags.org

info@youthtopia.world

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be produced or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recorded or otherwise, without the written permission of the copyright owners.

ISBN: 9789083299181

3
Happy Green World

“We are not isolated islands, but connected like links of the same chain. We are part of the chain of life. Our every action, whether deliberate or not, affects everyone else. Without waiting for others to change, if we change ourselves first, that in itself will make a difference” - Amma

4 Table of Contents Acknowledgements .................................................................... 5 Meet the Author ....................................................................... 5 Meet the Illustrator .................................................................... 5 Introduction ........................................................................... 6 Background Information about Reducing, Reusing and Recycling ...................... 6 Goals .................................................................................. 7 Content of the Happy Green Philippines Program....................................... 8 Activity Guide ......................................................................... 8 List of Activities ....................................................................... 8 General Comments on the Activities ................................................... 10 Mind Map ............................................................................ 10 Student book ......................................................................... 11 Game ................................................................................. 11 Program Duration .................................................................... 11 Activities ............................................................................. 12 Dictionary ............................................................................ 60

Acknowledgements

The main focus of the Happy Green Philippines educational program on waste is to raise awareness about the amount of waste we produce and encourage sustainable behaviour by teaching how to reduce, reuse and recycle waste. We want to give everybody a chance to live in a healthy and clean world and are convinced that changing society starts with educating the new generation.

We would like to thank all the volunteers worldwide who helped making the Happy Green World programs a success and support the Happy Green World Foundation.

Meet the author - Marlou Jongejan-Bessem

In 2006 Marlou moved to Cairo where she started several environmental projects, which led to the Happy Green World Foundation in 2013. The Happy Green World Foundation aims to raise awareness on environmental topics by developing educational programs on waste, water and energy for primary and secondary schools around the world. Our website is: www.happygreenworld.org

Meet the illustrator - Petra Houweling

Petra Houweling is the illustrator for the Happy Green World programs. She studied graphic design in the Netherlands and has worked on a range of programs for Happy Green World. Petra primarily illustrates for educational purposes, and her style is characterised by bright, warm colours.

5

Introduction

Countries all over the world are involved in a process of figuring out how to live in harmony with nature by adopting sustainable ways of dealing with energy, water and waste. Governments have plans and projects, but individuals and communities must also take responsibility in caring for the environment. Today we need to join hands and eagerly create a clean and Happy Green Philippines, for ourselves today but especially for the next generations. We should take care of the environment as we do for our families. After all, in order to be happy and healthy we need a clean and healthy world. To learn to do that, we first need to become aware of how we relate to waste, why we produce these vast amounts of waste, and how we can relate differently to waste by reducing, reusing and recycling waste.

We discard litter such as plastics, paper, glass, cans, aluminium and green waste because we think we cannot use it any more and that it will disappear by itself. However, the earth is a closed system, which means that waste will not disappear from our planet. We need to reuse or recycle used items and materials. Improvements in technology has made it possible to make new products out of waste. Some examples are: recycled paper products, recycled glass, recycled plastic products and compost.

This book aims to support teachers and other educators to help students learn about the problems that emerge from the fact that more and more waste is being produced globally by the growing world population. We will discuss the importance of living sustainably by teaching reducing, reusing and recycling in order to discourage pollution and the depletion of the natural resources of the earth.

Background information about Reducing, Reusing, Recycling

Together we can create a healthy environment and care for the future of this world. We can act! Each person can do his or her part! To prevent the depletion of our natural resources and the creation of mountains of waste, each and every one of us needs to change our behaviour regarding waste. We can learn to diminish our waste more easily by reducing, reusing and recycling it. For instance, we can reduce the amount of packaging and the use of cleaning detergents, and reuse plastic bags and clothes. We can recycle paper, plastic and glass and recycle green waste into compost. We can start building awareness by changing our own habits and, through our example, influence the habits of future generations. We should make sure that every child starts to develop the habit of properly disposing of waste and, most importantly, learns to reduce their waste.

This will lead to healthy and clean surroundings at school, but also at home and in the community. It will have a positive effect on the students’ tidiness, health and energy. Because these habits will be transferred to the home, the students will continuously apply the new behaviour learned through the practical activities. Over a period of 10 years we will surely see a huge difference in our societies, together building a Happy Green Philippines!

Reducing waste means that we produce less waste. It sounds simple and it is! By producing less

6

waste we will have less to dispose of. In order to reduce waste we need to critically assess our garbage. For instance, we can choose to use refillable printer cartridges and rechargeable batteries. Instead of using supermarket plastic bags, we can take reusable bags with us to carry our groceries home.

Reusing means that we use something more than once. In thinking twice before we throw something in the bin, we can give many objects a second life. For instance, an outgrown school uniform can be reused by a smaller child. A reusable drink bottle can be used many times, while a disposable bottle will be used only once. A plastic bag can be reused when buying groceries or as bin liner. Many products can be reused during art classes. Students can be creative while using a variety of reusable materials.

Recycling doesn’t only mean ‘reusing’ the product but also improving or changing it into a new product. When we recycle, our ‘old’ glass can be made into new glass, and used plastics can be made into new plastic products such as fleece blankets, toys, hospital utilities and many other useful products.

Green waste can be composted. Small organisms eat green waste like kitchen scraps, leaves and grass, and fertile soil is the result. Making compost – can be done by the students themselves at school or at home. During other activities students learn how to recycle paper and how to make compost.

A recycling company can collect the different sorts of waste that can be recycled. If such a company does not exist in your area, it might be interesting to start talking with the responsible people in your community or area to set up a recycling centre.

Advantages of reducing, reusing and recycling waste are less waste, decreased resources consumption decreased pollution, improved human and animal health, increased care for our environment… and money savings!

Goals

The goals of this program are:

1. Building awareness and knowledge about waste through practical exercises.

2. Encouraging students to change their behaviour regarding waste through reducing, reusing and recycling products and materials.

3. Teaching students to take responsibility for their waste in order to ensure a clean, healthy and more liveable environment for today and in the future.

4. Adopting a sustainable approach to waste disposal.

We are convinced that:

1. Students learn best through active ‘hands-on’ experiences.

2. The provided materials will help the students to build their self-esteem.

3. The materials provided encourage social interactions and academic excellence.

4. The activities build awareness and solution on the topic of waste.

5. Creative play and art are essential ways to teach students to communicate, to think, to feel and to express themselves.

5. Students love to explore and make things out of recyclable waste.

7. Students enjoy questioning and making mind maps.

8. Students relish tasks with which they can relate to.

7

Content of the Happy Green Philippines program

1. An activity Guide, which contains a number of practical activities to help students adopt sustainable behaviour and encourage them to reduce, reuse and recycle waste.

2. An interactive student book in which students learn about waste materials like plastic, green waste, glass and paper. The origins and decomposition times of the materials are discussed, as well as ways to reduce, reuse and recycle. With every page the city in the book is transformed step by step from a polluted to a clean city.

3. A game in which the players are rewarded (a few steps forward on the board) or punished (a few steps backward on the board) when adopting the appropriate behaviour towards waste.

The Activity Guide

The Activity Guide offers background information on waste and recycling and presents practical activities which can be done in schools or at home. The students are stimulated to think critically about their own behaviour towards waste and their environment.

Through multiple activities the students learn to recognise ‘waste materials’ in their environment. They learn how to reduce, reuse and recycle the waste they produce and that disposing garbage in the right bin leads to a clean and tidy environment while being able to reuse or recycle the materials.

List of Activities

The list activities are divided into 3 groups: A, T and D.

1. Awareness (A) of the waste issues;

2. Thinking (T), which leads to a more profound understanding of the problems and solutions of waste disposal; and

3. Doing (D), where students themselves act and recycle, adopting sustainable behaviour.

The activities are interactive and are designed for learning by doing. The teacher can pick and choose from the list of activities on the next page, choosing the activities that suit the age of your students, how much time you have available for the activity and the type of activity.

You can start for instance with activities that show the importance of caring for our planet (activities 2, 7, 19, 25, 28, 34), followed by activities on reduce (activities 8, 16, 22), reuse (activities 5, 9, 18, 27, 28) and recycling waste (6, 10, 14, 29).

8
9 Honour the Planet 30 A Recognising Waste 4-11 30 A Story of Cellio the Compost Caterpillar 4-7 20 A,T, D 1 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 12 13 13 14 15 14 16 17 16 18 19 18 20 19 21 22 20 23 24 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 26 29 28 30 31 30 32 31 33 Hazardous waste - Batteries 30 A D D 60+ 60+ A Reusable Lunchboxes and Drink Bottles 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 7-16 45 45 T Story: ‘The Life of … ’ 60 T The Effects of Waste 60 T Ways to Reduce Waste 30 T Ways to Reuse Waste 30 T Ways to Recycle Waste 45 D Separating Waste is Useful! 60 T Encouraging Sustainable Behaviour 45 D Composing a Song 45 Making Compost 60 60 D D D Organising an ‘Eco-Week’ 10-16 10-16 10-16 60+ T T ‘Plastic Soup’ Plastic Free July Movement 45 45 45 Packaging Causes Waste all all all all all all all all all all all all A A Lunchtime Waste 30 A Buy in Bulk 30 T What is the Difference? 45 D Happy Green Philippines Game 30 D Reactions of Materials to Soil, Water and Air 45 T Decomposition Times 45 D Making a Jump Rope 45 D Rotary EndPlasticSoup Trash(ure) Hunt 60 D Recycling Paper 60 Compost Game 30 D Planting Seeds and/or trees 60 D Reduce Food Waste Making Beeswax Wraps Making art and other useful objects with waste 34 33 34 36 37 39 40 43 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 53 54 56 57 58 59 all A all 60 A Gifting, sharing & lending Circular economy 1 & 2 3

General comments on the activities

Each activity is written for the recommended age group but can be taught to other age groups as well. The activities can be taught at primary schools, secondary schools, day cares or at home. The teacher can choose which activities are suitable for his or her group of students. Most activities can be completed in an hour or less.

Make sure to allow time for follow-up discussions on every activity. Topics to discuss are:

1. Did you act on your new knowledge? How did it change your behaviour?

2. Was it difficult to change?

3. How did your parents and friends react?

4. What can be done to keep up enthusiasm and improve success rates?

It is important to talk to the students and explain that new ideas and new habits take time to root. Make sure the students are not disappointed if they are not supported by their surroundings right away. Students do make a difference, and every small success is worth it! Many small successes add up to big ones, and in time they will change the world.

When teaching young students, start right away with the action rather than explaining the theory. They will enjoy learning by doing.

Mind map

In the Activity Guide, we make use of mind maps. A mind map is a tool that enhances organisational thinking. It is a creative and effective way of brainstorming and structuring your thoughts on a subject.

A mind map can be compared to a map of a city. The center of your mind map represents the most important idea you want to include. The main roads leading from the center represent the main thoughts in your thinking process. The minor roads represent your secondary thoughts. A mind map will give you a colourful overview that will help you to better memorise and structure the information.

You always start in the middle of the page or school board and put down the central idea in words or images. Connect the center with branches and write down other thoughts and associations. Use colours when making a mind map. Use curved lines like the branches of trees. Use one key word per line and use images, because images are worth a thousand words and are easy to remember.

10

Student book

The student book contains two tracks that show the child how to achieve a cleaner and greener world. A very polluted city is changing gradually into a clean city where bins are placed, the air, soil and water are clean, and the people are healthy and happy.

Furthermore, the origins of plastic, paper, green waste and glass, their applications and decomposition times are discussed, as well as ways to reduce, reuse and recycle these materials.

Game

The game is an application of the information the students learned during the lessons. Play the game in small groups in the classroom as described on the back side of the game. Make sure that every child knows how to play the game before sending it home.

Program Duration

The Happy Green Philippines program can be taught over several months during the academic year. It is up to the school or community centres to teach the program either as a monthly project (one activity a day for a month) or to spread it over consecutive months teaching one activity a week. The program also lends itself to after school clubs and holiday programs and further provides many ideas for assemblies or other school meetings.

11
mind map:
Example of a

Activities

(A) Activity 1: Story of Cellio the Compost Worm

Ages: 4-7, 20 min

Aim

After reading the story, the students will understand what compost is and how to make compost.

Description of the activity

Teacher reads the story of “Cellio the Compost Worm” to the students.

Cellio the Compost Worm

Once upon time there was a worm living in the forest. The small worm grew and grew while producing beautiful fertile compost through its castings. He loved to eat and eat to grow big and healthy. But this particular worm only liked certain foods. Do you know what kinds of foods those were?

One day, Cellio was searching for food when wandering beneath the tall trees in the forest with the sun shining through the leaves. He tried to eat everything he saw, since he wanted to grow big. He ate the leaves of the trees, which were really good. He took a bite from a plastic cup, but that was disgusting! He loved the fruits and grasses around, and he grew and grew. He ate a little insect, but that wasn’t very tasty, either. His favourite food was a tomato: a vegetable growing from a plant.

So Cellio loved leaves, grasses, fruits and vegetables but did not like meat, bread and plastics. Cellio and other worms and bacteria love to break down organic matter into fertile soil. This is called compost, and the trees and plants around him loved the nutrients from this fertile soil.

So the trees and plants help Cellio to grow strong and Cellio helps the trees and plants to grow tall. Cellio the compost worm turned organic waste, meaning leaves, grasses and fruits, magically into compost. He was doing a great job at recycling green waste into fertile compost!

Younger students can make a drawing of Cellio the Compost Worm and the foods he likes. Older students can open the student book and read about ‘green waste’ and discuss. What Cellio did was in fact ‘recycling’. Cellio transformed ‘green waste’ into ‘compost’. We can all benefit from our green kitchen waste when transforming it into compost. When recycling green waste we receive fertile soil and do not need to buy fertilisers. We can grow our own vegetables and herbs with the use of compost.

Conclusion

When we start to recycle green waste, we produce less waste, make fertile soil (compost) and can grow our own vegetables and herbs.

12

(A) Activity 2: Recognising Waste

Ages: 4-11, time: 30 min

Aim

Recognising and understanding waste.

Preparation

The teacher brings a bag filled with rubbish to school on the day that the lesson is planned. It is important that the rubbish bag holds all sorts of waste, but make sure it is safe for the students to interact with. Make sure that you have plastic, glass (not broken), paper, green waste like vegetable or fruit peelings, cans and clothes. Bring a piece of plastic or a tray to display the waste on.

This activity builds awareness through experience, therefore the students should see and interact with all the materials we call waste. Be careful the students do not touch the waste or wear gloves and wash their hands after wards.

Materials

Bag filled with waste like: piece of plastic, a foam tray, a milk carton, cereal box, cans, glass, paper, peelings, tea bags etc.

Description of the activity

The teacher and the students sit in a circle. Put down a piece of plastic in the middle of the circle, where the waste can be displayed. The teacher shows the plastic bag filled with waste and asks the students the following questions:

- Do you know what I have got here?

- What sorts of waste do you think are in the bag?

After ideas and discussions, turn the content of the waste bag out onto the piece of plastic. All was disposed of as ‘waste’.

1. What kind of materials do you see in the middle of the circle? Plastic, paper, food waste, juice carton, others sorts of packaging etc.

2. Is this all waste or could we use it again?

3. Have the students think of other ‘waste’ products.

The teacher starts drawing a mind map on the board by writing the word ‘waste’ in the middle. Students add to the mind map as shown below.

Conclusion

The students become aware of the products we discard as waste. With the help of a mind map the students brainstorm on the subject of waste and understand that some items can be used again.

13
Plastic Bags Juice boxes Glass Jar Cans Old Clothes Green Waste Leaves Cardboard Paper Food Leftovers Mindmap 2

(D) Activity 3: Making art and other useful objects with waste

Ages: 7-16, 60+ min

Aim

To make something decorative or useful out of ‘waste, used and discarded items. Students are encouraged to see waste as a resource for creativity.

Description of the activity

This activity is meant to serve as an inspiration and encourage the students to use discarded items in their art lessons. These items would have otherwise gone to landfill or added to the pollution of the environment.

Choose one of the items below and make art and craft out of these used items.

Plastic bottles

• Make dolls from used fabric scraps, paper, markers and use them as puppets for creative play. You find the instructions here: https://simplecraftidea.com/ make-doll-plastic-bottle/

• Make a fish for a colourful ‘under the sea’ display by following the steps pictured below.

Old T-shirts

• Make a no-sew shopping bag by following the instructions in this link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yNdW9MojrXM

• Make T-shirt yarn: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2hdZ4luc34

• Use the T-shirt yarn to crochet or make new items: https://sustainmy crafthabit.com/top-20-tshirt-yarn-projects/

Old Jeans

• Make a fashion bag from old jeans: https://betweennapsontheporch.net/25denim-bags-purses-made-from-recycled-jeans/ and https://sewguide.com/ diy-denim-jeans-bag/

14

Newspaper/magazines

• Use old newspaper and glue to make paper maché items, like bowls, picture frames, animals etc. https://www.diys.com/papier-mache-crafts/

• Use rolled-up magazine paper to decorate a picture frame and make art:https://diyprojects.com/rolled-paper-crafts/

Any items of fabric/waste

• Encourage students to make items of clothing for a fashion parade from discarded materials.

Conclusion

Students learn to look at waste differently and understand its valuable potential when waste is seen as a resource for creativity and artworks.

15

(D) Activity 4: Making Beeswax Wraps

Ages: 7-16, 45 min

Aim

To make an alternative for storing food, reducing the need for plastic cling film and reducing food waste. Giving new life to discarded cotton items.

Preparation

Ask the students to bring in old or unused fabrics (linen or cotton) such as bedding/pillowcase/blouse/shirt that will be cut up in circles, squares and rectangles. Be sure to wash, dry and iron the material first.

Source beeswax and possibly some resin (optional).

Watch a few tutorials on YouTube on how to make beeswax wraps, and choose the safest and most appropriate method for your situation (i.e. using an iron or an oven). Also read this step-by-step action plan for making beeswax wraps: https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/ home/craft-ideas/g25642328/diy-beeswax-reusuable-wraps/

Materials

• Cotton fabric (pre-loved if possible)

• Zig-zag scissors

• Beeswax

• Resin (optional)

• Grater

• Baking paper

• Iron

• Ironing board (optional)

• Oven

• Brush or spreader

Description of the activity

Discuss the uses for beeswax wraps. To cover food like a piece of cheese, half an avocado, bread, a bowl with leftovers… anything you would normally use plastic for.

Highlight that we will be using pre-used cotton material for this activity and explain that beeswax is the wax secreted by honeybees to make honeycombs. Beeswax is also used to make wood polishes and candles.

In a small group, cut out different sizes from the fabrics using zig-zag scissors to avoid fraying. Follow the steps of making the wraps, keeping in mind that you are working with very hot wax and a hot iron. Be sure to warn the students about the dangers of burning their fingers!

Do NOT let students do this activity unsupervised!

16

Iron-on method:

1. Grate the wax onto a piece of linen or cotton, spreading it evenly.

2. Sandwich the waxed piece of fabric between two sheets of baking paper.

3. Iron the fabric to melt the wax into the cloth.

4. Take care when you take out the piece of fabric, and hang to cool.

Oven method:

1. Place the piece of fabric on an old baking sheet.

2. Grate the wax onto the fabric, spreading it evenly.

3. Place the baking sheet in an oven and set the oven to 150 °C.

4. Keep checking and after a few minutes, the wax will melt into the fabric.

5. Use an old brush or spreader to coat the fabric evenly and to cover patches.

6. Let it cool.

Have children design a care instruction card with useful information. Be sure to include:

• Wipe with a damp cloth after each use or wash the wrap with COLD water and a little soap.

• To remove dried-on food, don’t pick it off, but leave the wrap to soak in cold water for a few minutes.

• Not recommended for raw meats, liquids, or foods that are still hot.

• If you take good care, the wrap should last for about a year. It can be composted after use, or re-waxed and used again.

These wraps make great gifts and also make a good fundraiser by selling them.

Conclusion

Children have been shown a good alternative for plastic wraps, and are aware that you can repurpose cotton and linen materials to make something new and useful. Using beeswax wraps will also cut out the need for single-use plastic.

17

(A) Activity 5: Reusable Lunch boxes and Drink bottles

Ages: 7-16, 45 min

Aim

To encourage students and parents to reduce their waste by using reusable materials.

Preparation

Teachers can read about the subject of reducing, reusing and recycling by checking the websites mentioned at the back of this Activity Guide. Show the students examples of reusable materials that students can use like lunch boxes and a reusable bottle.

Materials

Paper and pen.

Description of the activity

The teacher explains reusable packaging and gives examples. The activity entails that over the next weeks each child should bring food and drinks in sustainable materials. This means that the food is brought in a reusable container and the drinks in a reusable bottle, thereby avoiding one-time usages of plastic, paper or aluminium. The students write letters to their parents about their experiment to reduce waste at school. The students read their letters to the class and can discuss reusable or recycled materials that are used at home and in the classroom.

The students vote on the best letter, which will then be sent home to all the parents. Make sure only one letter per family is taken home. Sending an email and thus reducing paper is even better.

A classroom chart can be created to record individual successes.

The teacher makes a chart on a piece of paper listing the names of the students at the right side and the dates at the top. The teacher keeps a record of the waste on a daily basis by noting ++ for no waste / + less waste / - for more than necessary waste. After a week give a reward to the child with the ‘best’ success of that week or to the whole class in trying their best to reduce waste. Continue the same procedure over the following weeks in order to encourage this behaviour!

Conclusion

The students get a chance to share their knowledge on how to reduce waste with their parents. By trying their best they reduce waste together and get rewarded for it. Their behaviour is becoming more sustainable.

Tip: Encourage using email only instead of paper letters for the communication from school to parents.

18

(T) Activity 6: Story: ‘The Life of …’

Ages: 7-16, 60 min

Aim

Write a story about a piece of waste. An example is this recycled waste bin made of old tires.

Preparation

The teacher chooses a street or playground where the students are asked to look at objects of waste that have been thrown there. If this is not possible, the students can choose an object from the student book.

Materials

Paper and pen.

Description of the activity

The students write a story about a piece of waste found in the street or depicted in the student book.

The goal of the story is to talk about an object’s life and how its life can be extended by reducing, reusing or recycling it. The students can write about the negative effects waste has on nature and people and the 3 R’s: reduce, reuse and recycle. Possible points to include in the story:

1. Think about a name for the product and describe it.

2. Choose to either let the product tell its own story or write about the object yourself.

3. Where was it made?

4. Where was it sold? Who bought it?

5. How was it used?

6. What happened afterwards?

7. Where was it thrown away?

8. Who threw it away?

9. What are the effects of waste where you found it?

10. What could be done to reduce the negative effects of waste?

11. What can you do to lessen the impact on the environment?

12. How could this object be reused or recycled?

13. What could this material’s ‘next life’ be?

The stories can be attached to the school board and in the halls so other students can read them as well. Alternatively, let the students share their stories during an assembly. Students can even make an animated movie.

Conclusion

The students write a story about the (extended) life of an object of waste and share it with other students.

19

(T) Activity 7: The Effects of Waste

Ages: 7-16, 60 min

Aim

Students become aware that waste has an impact on air, soil, water and our health.

Preparation

The teacher watches two short movies on www.youtube.com to show the child during this activity. First show “A day in the life of your garbage and recyclables” and then “How does a modern landfill work?”

Materials

Whiteboard, computer with access to internet.

Description of the activity

The teacher shows the YouTube movies and asks the students to share their reactions.

The teacher discusses the course of waste from shop to landfill. What happens to waste after it has been disposed of? (For example, you buy yoghurt in a shop, eat it for breakfast, put the yoghurt cup in the bin and put the waste bin in front of the door, rubbish collectors take it to a landfill, the yoghurt cup sits there for many years, polluting the soil and groundwater, or gets burned, polluting the air). What are the effects of dumping waste in nature? Which items should you not throw in the bin? (batteries, household appliances and electronics).

The teacher discusses the central theme, ‘What are the effects of waste?’ The students call out the effects of waste while the teacher draws the following mind map on the board.

20

Waste has an effect on:

1. Air – The burning of waste in the landfills will lead to air pollution. Air pollution can affect humans and animals directly, through breathing the contaminated air, which can cause respiratory health hazards and allergies.

2. Soil – Pollution in the soil affects all vegetables and agricultural products, so our food will be of poor quality and humans and animals might consume contaminated food.

3. Water – Water pollution harms fish,aquatic plants, but also the soil. When the land/ soil is watered with contaminated water, the soil and the crops become contaminated as well; if contaminated water is used as drinking water, it can directly affect people’s health.

4. Animals – Animals could choke in waste, can be caught up in waste and can breath polluted air.

5. People – People could suffer from hygienic problems, physical problems like breathing trouble or headaches, or they may consume contaminated food or water.

Conclusion

It is very important to reduce, reuse and recycle waste because this decreases the bad effects of pollution on air, soil, water and our health.

21

(T) Activity 8: Ways to Reduce Waste

Ages: 7-16, 30 min

Aim

Using a mind map to brainstorm ways to reduce waste.

Preparation

Use internet to play the inspiring YouTube movie: “Landfill Harmonic The world sends us garbage, we send back music”.

Materials

Student book, whiteboard or big paper and coloured pencils.

Description of the activity

The teacher shows the YouTube movie “Landfill Harmonic” to the students and discusses it with the class. Please explain that a solution to the waste problem is to reduce, reuse and recycle waste. By reducing the waste we produce and not throwing so much away, we will have less waste and pollution in the future. It is up to us, human beings of all ages, to change our habits and clean and green our planet for now and the next generations.

The students are asked to make a mind map on how to reduce waste. They can make use of the information written in the student book. Can they think of any other ways to reduce waste than mentioned in the student book? What specific waste issues are related to their city, and what solution can they think of?

Create another class mind map on the subject ‘reducing waste’ by sharing everyone’s ideas.

22

(T) Activity 9: Ways to Reuse Waste

Ages: 7-16, 30 min

Aim

The students think of ways to reuse waste.

Preparation

The teacher and students bring a ‘waste product’ from home.

The teacher knows how to explain the making of a mind map and what the purpose is.

Materials

Boxes, glass bottle, carton boxes, plastic bags, paper and garden waste.

Description of the activity

The students share their ‘waste product’ and discuss ideas about how they can reuse their waste. The students are encouraged to give examples of reusing waste.

Then show the YouTube video: “Green Kids Take Charge: part 2 of 3”.

After watching the video, the students make their own mind maps on ways to reuse waste. When finished the teacher draws a class mind map on the white board with the input of the students. The mind map could look like this:

Conclusion

The students have learned to brainstorm on ways to reuse waste with the use of a mind map.

23
Plastic Box Storage Arts & Crafts Arts & Crafts Lunch box Drinking Bottle Arts & Crafts Plastic Bottle Paper Sheet Carton Storage Make bin 1. Use 2 sides 2. Use as wrapping paper 3. Arts & Crafts Compost Food for Animals Bottle Jar Drink bottle Vase for Flowers Storage Pen holder Reuse Waste Plastic Bag Shopping Bag Binliner Arts & Crafts Plastic Paper Green Waste Glass Mindmap 5

(T) Activity 10 - Ways to Recycle Waste

Ages: 7-16, 45 min

Aim

The students become aware of what products are made from and which materials can be recycled.

Preparation

The teacher brings products to school and displays them on a table.

Materials

Fleece vest, tyre, electrical appliance, paper, glass, compost, cans, computer, internet.

Description of the activity

First show the YouTube video: “Sesame Street, Recycling Blues”. The teacher points out a product and asks the students what material it is made of. Can they think of what material other products are made from?

Glass is made from sand.

Plastic is made from oil or corn.

Paper is made from trees.

Cans are made from aluminium.

Tires are made from rubber.

Compost is made from green waste.

The teacher explains that some materials and products can be recycled into new products. Most products are recycled in factories. However making compost or recycling paper can be done at home or at school (see activities 14 and 31).

The students pair up and make mind maps on ways to recycle waste. They can make use of the student book or internet to research the options.

When finished, each group reports their mind maps to their peers. Next, the teacher draws a class mind map on the whiteboard. The mind map might look like this:

24

Conclusion

Most products can be recycled into new products. Recycling saves natural resources, energy, water and money for fabrication, and less waste is transported to landfills.

25

(D) Activity 11: Separating Waste is Useful!

Ages 7-16, 60 min

Aim

To make a plan for sorting and recycling waste within the school, and to have it collected and recycled at the nearest recycle center.

Preparation

The teacher makes sure that at least 5 bins for waste and recyclable materials are available in the classroom.

Materials

Six bins/ boxes, paper, coloured pencils, magazines and scissors.

Description of the activity

Show the students one of the following YouTube videos: “Green Kids Take Charge: Part 3 of 3”. Divide the students into groups. Each group is responsible for one type of material or waste: plastic, paper, glass, metal, green waste or miscellaneous. The students come up with a plan to teach people how to sort the waste in the school and how to have it collected or brought to a recycle company or recycle center. Each group makes a waste management plan for their type of material, including but not limited to the following activities:

1. Investigate the number of existing bins at school and divide them into 5 groups (general waste, fogo, recycling, paper, containers for change).

2. Make posters that clearly show which material has to go in each bin, and how you can reuse or recycle that material. You can also use colourful stickers to label the bins.

3. Find strategic locations around the school to place the bins.

4. Decide who is going to collect the materials from the bins around the school and bring it to the collection site.

5. Find out which company is able to collect the waste from school and ask if they are able to collect the sorted materials from school every 2 weeks.

6. Think of a plan together for what you can do if the waste is not sorted correctly.

7. Make a presentation of your group’s waste management plan for the other students and teachers.

Make sure the students know what the plan is and how to sort the different materials. Tell them different coloured bins are placed around the school and that all students start recycling. Let the students know why recycling is important. Ask a small group of students from each class to be in charge of informing you how the recycling project is going. Let them know questions are welcome and help everyone to be successful.

The teacher discusses the plans for the six different materials and summarises them in one general waste plan that mentions the actions and names of the responsible students and teacher.

26

In the following weeks the students make sure that the different types of waste at school are sorted and are correctly placed in the following bins:

NON-RECYCLABLE BIODEGRADABLE RECYCLABLE

Bin 1 – red – non-recyclable

Bin 2 – green bin – biodegradable

Bin 3 – yellow – recyclable

Allow the students to bring waste from home if desired. Make sure the recyclable materials are collected by a local waste company and is recycled correctly.

Conclusion

The students have implemented a plan to separate and collect plastic, paper, glass, metal and miscellaneous in the school and make sure the company that collects the recyclables will reuse or recycle these materials.

27

(T) Activity 12: Encouraging Sustainable Behaviour Towards Waste

Ages 7-16, 45 min

Aim

To allow the students to become aware of their own ‘sustainable’ behaviour towards waste by becoming aware of the concepts waste hierarchy and sustainability.

Waste hierarchy

Preparation

Divide the class into pairs. The teacher reads about the concepts of waste hierarchy and sustainability to explain to the students during the lesson. Google these concepts for more information if needed.

Materials

Pen and paper.

Description of the activity

The teacher explains that sustainable behaviour is a behaviour that conserves an ecological balance both for now and in the future by avoiding the depletion of natural resources and the pollution of nature. The waste hierarchy explains that in terms of waste the most preferred option is prevention, followed by reduce, reuse, recycling, recover and disposal.

The students are grouped into pairs and interview each other on their sustainable behaviour. They write down the answers and count the yeses and no’s. The higher the number of yeses, the more sustainable their behaviour is.

Look at the class statistics and find out if there is a specific area of negative responses and why that might be. The teacher discusses the answers with the students and writes the most important answers on the whiteboard.

28

Interview 1:

1. Do you love nature? What is so special about it?

2. Are you dismayed when finding waste on the streets, in the sea or in nature?

3. Do you always throw waste in the bin?

4. Do you bring a reusable lunchbox and drink bottle to school?

5. Do you reuse your waste at home? If yes, how?

6. Do you think reducing, reusing and recycling waste is useful?

7. Do you recycle waste at home? For instance make new paper from old or make compost?

8. Do you pick up waste from the street or when walking in nature?

9. Do you take your own bag to the shops?

The second group of questions could be answered in pairs or as a whole class.

Interview 2:

1. How would you like to see the waste problem solved?

2. How could your class start with reducing, reusing and recycling waste?

3. What is the preferred option: recycling or reducing and why?

4. Would you like to learn how to make paper and compost?

5. How could you help clean and green your surroundings?

The teacher discusses the answers with the students and formulates the conclusions on the board.

When we reduce, reuse and recycle materials, we do not have to discard them and we can use natural resources over and over again. Sustainable behaviour has less impact on the environment and it saves money.

Conclusion

Students become aware of their ‘sustainable’ behaviour towards waste and know the meaning of the waste hierarchy.

29

(D) Activity 13: Composing a song

Ages 7-16, 45 min

Aim

The students compose a song.

Preparation

Teacher watches the song “Reduce, Reuse and Recycle” by mrdugger25 from www.youtube. com.

Materials

Large papers, colouring pencils, computer with internet access.

Description of the activity

Show the song Reduce, reuse and recycle from Youtube. Divide the students into groups and let them compose a song about waste, its effect on the environment and how to reduce, reuse and recycle. Let the students think about a way to present the song, using the movements and making a poster to be able to sing along.

Each group can present their song to their peers. The teacher can make a video, which can be viewed during a parent meeting.

Conclusion

The students composed a song on recycling waste and sustainable behaviour to sing during the rest of the school year.

30

(D) Activity 14: Making Compost

Ages: 7-16, 60 min

Aim

Making bins in which green waste can be dropped to turn into compost.

Materials

Chicken wire or new compost bins, 4 poles, tape, a partly shaded area.

Preparation

The teacher allocates a location on the school premises to place the compost bins. This needs to be a partly shaded area and not too close to the play area.

Description of the activity

The teachers discusses the process of making compost with the students. The process includes the following steps: making or buying the compost bins; putting the bins in place; filling the bins; letting the materials decompose; using it for your growing flowers, vegetables or herbs or spreading the compost over flowerbeds, plants and trees.

The teacher and the students start writing a compost management plan. This plan needs to discuss the making of the compost bins and the making of compost and who is responsible. Divide the students into two groups. Each group will be in charge of the following activities:

1. Making of the two bins;

2. Collecting waste from classes, filling the bins, checking the content (every week another child);

3. Using the compost.

Read the following instructions to both groups so they know what to do. Put the 4 poles in the ground and secure the chicken wire around it and wrap plastic around the inside of the wire. Leave the bottom and top open.

The students start filling the first bin with green waste and mix it well. When the first bin is full make the content moist, cover it with plastic and start fill the second bin over time. The students build two bins in order to have compost continuously. Check the content of the bins regularly and take out the waste that does not belong in the compost bin. After 3 months the content has turned into compost. When using the compost you can use a sieve to get rid of the big pieces in the compost and add them to the other compost bin. Be aware that the heap has to stay moist and needs air at the same time. If it is not moist, sprinkle some water over the heap. To prevent the sun drying out the compost heap, you can cover the heap with plastic.

Turn the material every 2 weeks to ensure that there is enough air in it. If the heap is too wet or there is not enough air, it will turn to a foul-smelling soup instead of compost. In this case, add some strips of newspaper or some sawdust and mix these in well. The heap will heat up and the material will turn into compost. Place someone in charge of checking the bins regularly to take out the materials that are do not belong there and to check the level of the moisture and air.

31

When the compost is finished, take out the ‘not totally decomposed material’ and add it to the second bin. The compost can be used to fertilise existing plants or you can plant new seeds in it. The nutrients in the fertile soil help to grow herbs, fruits, vegetables, flowers, plants and trees. Print the compost flyer that clearly states what is allowed to go into the compost bin and what is not. Attach the flyer to the compost bin and display it on the school board. Place a smaller compost bin in the classroom. The students can discard their peels and other organic lunch leftovers in this bin and empty it every day into the larger compost bin outside. If the compost dries out quickly , make sure you cover it with a plastic sheet or water it regularly.

Conclusion

Students know how to build a compost bin and turn garden waste and organic waste into compost. They can grow vegetables, fruits and herbs from the compost at school or at home.

32

(A) Activity 15: Hazardous waste - Batteries

Ages: 7-16, 30 min

Aim

Students become aware of how often we use hazardous waste like batteries, understanding what impact batteries have on our environment and what we can do to prevent harmful effects.

Preparation

The teacher finds out if there is a battery collection and/or recycling program available for batteries near them. You can often find recycling depots run by the council or shops like Bunnings.

Materials

The teach:er brings some samples of electronic devices running on batteries to school. Examples are: a watch, students toys, flash light, a mobile phone, computers, radios, cameras and remote controls.

Description of the activity

The teacher displays the electronic devices on the table and asks the following questions:

1. What they are running on? (batteries)

2. Can you think of other examples of devices that are using batteries? (smoke detector, electric music instruments, game boys, alarm clock, wireless mouse and cars )

3. What are you supposed to do when the batteries are dead? (As batteries have toxic materials in them you need to bring them to a battery collection point so they can be properly recycled)

4. Why are batteries hazardous waste? (Batteries contain toxic materials such as cadmium, nickel, zinc and manganese which are harmful to the environment (soil, water and air) and humans and animals when they end up in landfills.

5. How can you reduce, reuse and recycle batteries? (reduce batteries: not buying them and instead purchasing equipment that is running on an electric cable, reuse batteries: buy rechargeable batteries instead of single use (primary) batteries, recycle batteries: bring your batteries to shops or point where they are collected and transported to proper recycle facilities.)

6. Make a plan to set up a battery collection and recycling program within the school so all used batteries will be collected and recycled properly. Make sure you include:

• A battery collection point at school; use a collection container that is safe for kids and supervised by adults

• Who will collect/bring the batteries from school to the recycle facility

• A visit to the collection or recycle facility if possible.

Conclusion

The students are made aware of the hazardous impact of batteries on our environment when ending up in landfill and have learned how important it is to bring batteries to collection points for recycling.

33

(A,T, D) Activity 16: Reduce Food Waste

Ages: 7-16, 60 min

Aim

Students become aware of the amount of food that gets wasted (1/3 of all foods), and are encouraged to reduce their personal food waste. Students learn to make a quick and simple nutritious meal by using up leftover and ‘sad-looking’ or wonky vegetables. In this case an omelette and a vegetable soup.

Preparation

Watch these two YouTube clips:

Search for ‘YouTube SavingFood Educational on food waste’ or use this link for a 3:29 min. video: https://youtu.be/0eqxgvZNn0I

Search for ‘Do not feed the bin’ or use this link for a 2:05 min. video: https://youtu.be/XJ7VQdaZ4lM

Prepare age-appropriate discussion points (example: do you always finish your food? What do you do with the leftovers? What happens to them? Landfill – Methane - Waste of resources/ money/food). Did you see how much food gets wasted? (1/3)

Prepare a cooking station, buy eggs and bring in stock cubes and possible some leftover cooked pasta/rice. Ask students to bring in a ‘sad-looking’ or wonky vegetable from their fridge at home.

Materials:

• Computer/smartboard/TV to watch YouTube clips.

• A hob, frying pan, soup pot, cutting and stirring utensils, plates, cutlery.

• Eggs, stock cube or salt/pepper, oil, milk.

• Hand blender (optional).

Description of the activity

Have a quick discussion about what students do with food waste (if they haven’t finished their breakfast, lunch or dinner, or old forgotten fruit and vegetables in the fridge etc).

Discuss the waste issues here, also touching on the energy, water and other resources that go into growing that food.

Watch one or both of the YouTube clips, and discuss afterwards (learn anything new? any surprises? anything you can change at home?).

Collect the sad-looking vegetables the students brought in from home and inspect them (if you notice any mould - don’t use, but throw in compost bin). Brainstorm with the students what you could make with these vegetables to use them up (stir-fry/sauce/mash/quiche/frittata etc.). Explain we will make soup and/or an omelette with these vegetables. Either work in small groups, or you can do this activity as a whole class demonstration, using students to help when possible.

34

Omelette: Use any onions/peppers/zucchini etc. The students can wash, peel and cut the vegetables. Sauté them in some oil until soft. Ask the students to crack the eggs, whisk them with some milk and salt and pepper. Add to the pan, stir and then cover until all egg has set. Share and enjoy.

Vegetable soup: Use any root vegetable (potato/carrot/parsnip) or pumpkin/celery/onion etc. The students can wash, peel and cut the vegetables. Put into a large pot of water, together with a stock cube and some salt and pepper. Boil until the vegetables are soft. You can then choose to add some rice/pasta to make a chunky soup or use the hand blender so the soup will thicken and become smooth.

Enjoy the meal and reinforce that you can still use up your older vegetables and make something nutritious.

The students are encouraged to make a list or a mind map of actions to reduce food waste to take home and stick it on the fridge. Find an example of a mind map below:

Use leftovers for breakfast/lunch/dinner

Prepare a meal plan

Buy what you need using a shopping list

REDUCE FOOD WASTE

Compost your waste container breakfast lunch dinner breakfast lunch dinner

Combine pantry items with what’s in your fridge and get creative (stew/beans/fried rice/pasta/ omelette/soup/quiche/frittata)

Plan for a ‘clear out the fridge’ dinner

Conclusion

Feed leftovers to chickens

Buy less

By becoming aware of the issues around food waste and learning to cook a nutritious meal with leftovers or ‘sad-looking’ vegetables, the students will become less wasteful with their food.

35
SHOP

(D) Activity 17: Organising an ‘Eco-Week’

Ages 7-16, 60+ min

Aim

To share the knowledge the students have about reducing, reusing and recycling waste with the school.

Preparation

The teachers make a list of which activities are going to take place during Eco-Week. Examples of activities can be taken from this Activity Guide, or other activities can be planned such as:

1. ‘Dress up a chair’ challenge – Each class will revamp an old chair using reused and recycled material. The chairs can be sold at the silent auction.

2. Junk to Funk Fashion Show – Students who have signed up will be making outfits out of reusable or recycled material to show on a Junk to Funk Fashion Show.

3. Package Free Lunch Challenge – Students can earn house points for bringing in or buying from the canteen a packaging-free lunch.

4. Silent Art Auction. Students can create an artwork made from recycled materials to be entered in a silent auction. Parents and students can place their bids, and the money can go to a ‘green’ cause.

5. Set up a ‘Container for Change’ bin at school to recycle cans and bottles for cash. You can use the cash for green projects like setting up a vegetable garden at school.

Materials

Pen, paper, computers, recycled materials, allocating a bin for containers for change.

Description of the activity

The students start planning the chosen activities in small groups. For every activity one group of students makes an action plan discussing the following activities:

1. Set a date for the Eco-Week (together with the teacher)

2. Invite people for the Eco-Week by writing emails or letters or announcing the event in the newsletter.

3. Make sign-up lists for the different activities and display them throughout the school.

4. Make promotion materials like posters.

5. Choose the music (for the Junk to Fashion Show).

6. Choose the person who will be in charge of taking pictures and/or filming the event.

7. Choose a green cause for the school to which the auction money will go.

8. Enjoy the Eco-Week and take lots of pictures for the next newsletter! Write the name of the person responsible behind every task, and make sure that every child in the group knows his or her task. Ask the students to report back to the teacher at the end of each week. This activity can be repeated every year.

Conclusion

Students have fun and make money by reusing and recycling waste materials.

36

(D) Activity 18: Plastic Free July movement

Ages 10-16, 60+ min

Aim

Students learn about the Plastic Free July movement and rethink their habits concerning single-use plastics. They look critically at their own and their family’s use of single-use plastics and find ways to reduce that by swapping them for more sustainable options.

Preparation

Read through the website: https://www.plasticfreejuly.org

This movement started in Australia in 2011 and has since become a global movement. They encourage to start small with simple swaps and eventually trying to go without single-use plastics for a whole month (and beyond).

Find alternative materials for the single use plastics: plastic bags can be swapped for cotton bags, plastic drink cups for jam jars, plastic straws for metal straws, plastic drink bottles for glass bottles, single-use small bottles can be swapped for large bulk water with reusable water bottles, etc.

Materials

Computer/smartboard to explore the website. Whiteboard/blackboard.

Source and display single use plastics and other alternative materials that are mentioned above.

Description of the activity

Display single use items and their more sustainable alternatives on a table in the class room. Discuss with the students what kind of single-use plastics they use on a daily or weekly basis. Divide students into groups of 3-4, and ask them to list all the single-use plastic that gets thrown away each week.

Bring the students back and ask them to write their items on the board or a large piece of paper. Then group these single-use plastics in the places where they are used (for example at school, shops, restaurant, market, work or at home).

Ask the students to discuss these items within their groups and let them come up with more sustainable alternatives and ways to avoid the use of plastic. Make sure these include:

- to plan ahead and always bring a cup, cutlery, container, metal/wooden straw, bags, when you go out

- to buy in bulk, buy loose items with the use of your own bag or container - to make bags from an old sheet, pillowcase or net curtain

- to look for packaging with lower footprint; buy cans instead of plastic bottles, paper for plastic, and make sure you recycle any waste you collect - to refuse plastic items or use plastics multiple times. Refusing plastics has the biggest sustainable impact. Ask yourself: do I really need a bag for this item? Can I buy this produce loose/without packaging?

37

For homework, the students are encouraged to record the single-use plastics of their family in a week. Ask them to analyse this use after a week and let them come up with solutions to reduce their use of single-use plastics in their groups. They write down what they would need to do to reduce their plastic waste. If applicable, they can even make some items to help reduce their plastic use. Think of produce bags or shopping bags from used material, or they can upcycle jars to make them into keepcups.

At the end of the activity, the students pledge to find a sustainable alternative for three of their most used single-use plastics items for a month. They can share their pledge with their class mates. At the end of the month, you can do this exercise again and calculate how much waste the students have saved by making some simple changes in their behaviour with regards to the use of single-use plastics.

Conclusion

Reducing waste by refusing the use of single-use items and plastics is very achievable. It just takes a little thought and planning. The students have learned to find alternatives for single-use items and collectively are making more sustainable choices which has a positive environmental impact.

38

(T) Activity 19: ‘Plastic Soup’

Ages: 10-16, 45 min

Aim

The students become aware of the existence of large areas in the oceans that are polluted by plastics and micro plastics. This phenomenon is called ‘plastic soup’.

Materials

Computer with internet access.

Preparation

Look at the website www.plasticsoupfoundation.org

Description of the activity

Show the YouTube movies on plastic soup: “Plastic Soup – The Great Pacific Patch” and “Recycled Island From Plastic Ocean” and discuss this solution to the problem.

The students work in pairs and start to write a letter or an article about plastic soup. The students can write a letter to a company or supermarket telling them about the dangers of plastics, who is impacted and how they can contribute to the solution, for instance by reducing plastic packaging or increase company lead recycling options.

Gather information from the internet on the following questions while writing the article or letter:

1. What is the meaning of ‘plastic soup’?

2. Where can you find it, and how big is it and what are micro plastics?

3. How does the waste end up there? (via rivers, air, land)

4. Who is going to be affected by the plastic soup? (marine animals, humans when eating fish)

5. What can we do to stop the polluting of the oceans? (beach cleanups)

6. Which organisations are working to solve this problem and how? (ocean cleanup) When the students have finished, they read their articles or letters to their peers.

Conclusion

Students learn about the magnitude of the plastic soup and its impacts on animals and humans. They become aware of measures that can be taken by individuals and companies to reduce plastic pollution, reducing plastics to end up in our rivers and oceans.

39

(T) Activity 20: Circular Economy

Ages: 10-16, time: 45 min

Aim

Students understand the difference between a linear and a circular economy.

Preparation

The teacher reads and watches the following link produced by the Ellen Mac Arthur Foundation. This foundation is a leading organisation in the transition towards a circular economy. Search for their video ‘Re-thinking the process: The circular economy’ or use this link: https://www.facebook.com/EllenMacArthurFoundation/videos/10155752559984821

Materials

A computer with internet access, whiteboard, HGW student book and paper and pen.

Description of the activity

The teacher shows the children the Youtube video (3:46 minutes). Ellen Mac Arthur Foundation: Re-thinking the process: The circular economy.

The teacher explains the difference between a linear and circular economy. A linear economy is a system where raw materials are taken from finite resources to make or produce a product. The product gets consumed or used, and at the end of its lifecycle is discarded, producing waste.

A circular economy is an economic system aiming at minimising waste by reusing resources, materials and nutrients indefinitely. The concept of the circular economy is to mimic nature, for example when a tree or animal dies, it becomes nutrients for other animals or plants so they can grow. It is all about reusing our resources indefinitely and avoiding waste. Discarded products are reused and redesigned as a source for reproducing, repurposing or redesigning products.

The behaviour of humans within the two systems when producing a product looks like the following:

• Linear economy: Take=>Make=>Dispose; waste is produced and finite resources are discarded (into landfill).

• Circular economy: Returned=>Redesigned=> Remake=> Repair=>Returned; no waste is produced and the precious finite resources are reused indefinitely.

Discuss the two models with the students. Discuss what the benefits are for both models. Come to the conclusion that the circular economy is far superior when it comes to minimising waste and reusing resources indefinitely when producing a product.

40

Next, the teacher writes the following words in this order on the board:

• Redesign

• Production

• Waste

• Reuse, Repair, & Recycle

• Distribution

• Collection/Return

• Consumption

In pairs, the students place the words in the correct order to reflect a circular economy model. There is one word they won’t need, remind the students of that. (That word is: waste.)

After a few minutes, using student input, draw the correct model on the board and discuss with the class. Be sure to point out that WASTE does NOT belong in a circular economy.

The closed circle of the circular economy can look like this:

Production

Distribution

Design

Collection

Return

Consumption

Reuse

Repair & Recycle

This is also referred to as ‘a closed loop’. Let the students explain why that is also a good name.

Now use paper as a practical example of a circular product. Ask the students to draw a similar closed loop for paper, adding visuals, like drawings and pictures.

After a few minutes, draw the closed loop of paper on the board, making sure to explain what happens in each step (production, consumption etc.)

41
CIRCULAR ECONOMY

This is a practical example of a closed loop of paper:

(News) Paper

(Production)

New design from paper

(Redesign)

Collect & Schred paper into pulp

(Collection, Return)

CLOSED LOOP OF (NEWS)PAPER

(News) Paper to shops

(Distribution)

Buy & Read (News)Paper

(Consumption)

Reuse, repair &recycle (News) Paper

Discuss with the students that not all products can be processed in a circular way. Many products or parts of products don’t get recycled and end up in landfill. It is crucial that products are designed, from the start, with the circular economy in mind. Hopefully in the future more products will be designed circular to avoid waste.

Conclusion

Students understand the difference between a linear and a circular economy and circular product design, and which steps to take to create a closed loop ensuring resources to be indefinitely reused and recycled, and no waste is generated.

42

(A) Activity 21: Gifting, Sharing & Lending - Nr 1.

Ages: 4-10, 45 min

Aim

The students recognise that by lending, sharing and using pre-loved, second-hand items, we reduce waste, and save money and resources.

Materials

Paper and drawing materials. White board/black board/smart board/large paper to make mind maps with the students.

Description of the activity

Start a conversation about what you do with items such as toys and clothing that are still good enough to play with or wear, but which you don’t use anymore. Do you just throw them away? Such a waste of money and resources. Explain as needed.

Discuss the options of what to do with the excess items: - give to a friend, do a swap, sell online, bring to a second-hand shop etc. Most people are happy to lend you items, or even gift them to you. Also discuss why buying new is not the best option – a lot of resources are used to make them (water, materials, labour) and adds to landfill in the future.

Divide the students into groups and let them brainstorm for 10 minutes on how to avoid buying new items in the following situations:

1. Outgrown your clothes or in need of bigger size clothes

2. Toys you no longer want or new toys you would like

3. Birthday party

4. Holidays

5. School production

Once each group has discussed all the above situations and came up with ideas, the teacher creates a class mind map on the white board with the ideas of the students. The mind map can look like this:

43
HOW TO AVOID BUYING NEW ITEMS Holidays Clothes Party Toys School Productions Borrow & share camping gear Borrow & share toys Join a library Gift old toys to friends and family Swap puzzles Borrow & share snorkling gear Borrow & share speciality gear (for skiing) Borrow or hire instead of buying gear Buy second hand Use rechargeable batteries Organise a clothes swap Buy quality Upcycle clothes Repair clothes Borrow & upcycle costumes & props Shop second hand Use old sheets & cardboards for props Reuse from previous productions Borrow & upcycle decorations Wrap present in fabric Gift preloved items Borrow dress up costumes Borrow reusable plates, cups, cutlery instead of single-use Make reusable decorations, flags from fabric

(A) Gifting, Sharing & Lending - Nr 2.

Ages 10-16, time: 60 min

Aim

The students recognise that by lending, sharing and using pre-loved, second-hand items, we reduce waste, save money and save resources. They become aware of existing groups on the internet like Facebook’s Buy Nothing Project, sell/swap pages, local on-selling pages etc.

Materials

Computer/smartboard with internet connection. Blackboard/large paper and pens. Individual devices with an internet connection.

Description of the activity

Discuss if students have bought items that are used only once or a few times. Talk about the effects: waste of money, add to landfill, waste of resources etc.

What can we do to avoid situations like that? Pass it on, sell second-hand, look to borrow before buying, shop at charity shops, ask around.

Discuss different situations applicable to the students’ environment: you can think of school uniforms, sports equipment, dressing-up clothes for parties, catering for large parties/groups. Always keeping in mind what we can do to AVOID buying new items, and discuss the benefits.

Search for the YouTube film ‘The Story of Stuff with Annie Leonard’ and let the students watch this 21-minute film. You can also use this link: https://youtu.be/9GorqroigqM

Briefly discuss what the students have learned.

Introduce local websites to the group: swap/sell Facebook groups, Gumtree, the Buy Nothing project on Facebook. Browse one of these websites in-depth with the students. We recommend joining a local Buy Nothing group on Facebook and show what type of materials are being gifted and what the rules and regulations are.

Talk about shopping at charity shops or second-hand shops and identify where these shops are located.

Students can raise awareness by designing posters or posts with encouraging messages about thinking to borrow before buying new etc. Students and parents are encouraged to sign up for local gifting sites. Students can also create a swap/lend/borrow website or facebook page for their local (school) community or class.

Conclusion

Students learn that there is often no need to buy brand new items if you ask around to borrow first. By gifting, sharing and lending people can avoid adding waste to landfill and conserve resources. Students are encouraged to stimulate a second-hand culture in their community.

44

(A) Activity 22: Packaging Causes Waste

All ages, time: 45 min

Aim

Recognising that a large amount of waste comes from packaging.

Preparation

The teacher and the students bring the requested materials to school before the activity starts.

Materials

Boxes or jars of products like cornflakes, peanut butter, rice, pre-packaged products, fruits, milk, yoghurt, chewing gum and drink bottles. Bring a full and an empty container of the same product (or a product that is easy to empty) and a set of scales.

Description of the activity

This activity can be done in small groups. Each group of students does the following:

(1) compares the weight of the product to the weight of the packaging;

(2) writes down the results;

(3) shares the results with the other students.

Each group should have one product and a scale. The teacher asks one child to write down the weights and results, one to replace the product, and one to present the results to the other groups.

1. All kinds of products are on the teacher’s table. Of each product there is one empty and one full. One child from each group chooses a product and its packaging and brings them to his or her group. The students compare the weight of the product and its packaging and write down the weights of the product itself and the weight of the packaging. Next, discuss the necessity of the packaging. When finished, the students return the product to the table and choose another product and packaging.

2. The students make a list of products that have little packaging (fruits, rice, potatoes) and products that have much packaging (like liquids or breakable products, chewing gum or double-wrapped biscuits) and discuss whether the packaging is necessary or excessive.

3. The students should become aware of the amount of packaging a product has, compared to the product itself, and learn to look critically at extra packaging. The teacher explains that we can reduce waste when diminishing the packaging of a product. Excessive packaging such as done by take-away restaurants and double-wrapped products should be avoided. After use always discard the packaging in the correct bin to reuse and recycle it.

Younger students can use the scales to become aware that packaged materials are always heavier than non-packaged items, and they can point out the necessary packaging and the packaging that is not really necessary (like products that have two different kind of packaging).

Conclusion

Diminishing packaging is a great way to reduce waste. This can be done by taking your own carrying bag to the shop, using a keep cup or choosing non-prepackaged items.

45

(A) Activity 23: Lunchtime Waste

All ages, 30 min

Aim

Understanding how much waste we produce everyday during lunchtime.

Preparation

The teacher and the students bring food and drinks for lunch to school.

Materials

The teacher brings some samples: a cucumber in plastic, fruit in aluminium foil, crisps in a bag, juice boxes and other wrappings that are normally taken to school.

Description of the activity

Show the YouTube movie: “Green Kids Take Charge: Part 1 of 3”. This activity builds awareness through experience; therefore the child should discover how much waste is brought to school every lunch break.

Students think about the following questions and come up with ideas that lead to the reduction of waste.

1. What did you bring today for break time? All students put their food and drinks on the table and look at the packaging of it.

2. What is considered to be waste?

3. How can we reduce the waste of our meals?

4. When you are finished eating and drinking, where do you throw the waste?

The students place their waste in a big pile and become aware that this amount of waste is produced by only one class in one day after one break!

Let the students brainstorm on possible way to reduce their lunchtime waste:

- Bring your drinks in a reusable bottle every day and clean it after use.

- Bring your bread or biscuits in a reusable container.

- If you bring crisps, buy a family bag and take only some of it to school in a reusable container.

- Encourage parents to offer lunch in reusable boxes and drink bottles.

- Encourage school to only offer foods on reusable plates (no styrofoam) and drinks in reusable cups.

- Waste needs to go in the bin and make sure you recycle it right (for composting, containers for change and recycling) if possible!

Activity 5 teaches the students to bring lunchtime waste in reusable packaging.

Conclusion

The students enjoy their food and drinks and agree to throw waste in the bin and to reduce their lunchtime waste over the following days.

46

(A) Activity 24: Buy in Bulk

All ages, 30 min

Aim

The students discover that a big bag of popcorn or crisps will lead to less waste than many small bags.

Preparation

The teacher brings the requested materials to school before the activity starts.

Materials

Large bag of crisps and small bags of crisps and tape.

Description of the activity

Each child receives a small bag of crisps. The teacher holds the large bag of crisps. The teacher asks the following questions to the students and writes the answers on the board:

- What is the weight of the crisps in the small bag? And in the large bag?

- How many small bags have the same weight as one large bag?

The students are allowed to eat and enjoy the crisps. When finished eating, tape the empty bags to each other in the same form as the big bag. Tape as many small bags together as would hold the same weight as the one large bag. Which packaging produces more waste?

The teacher writes the following statements on the whiteboard and asks the students to discuss the answer:

1. You produce less waste when buying 200 grams in small bags of crisps.

2. You produce less waste when buying 200 grams in large bags of crisps. Choose which answer is correct. (The correct answer is 2).

How could you still bring some popcorn or crisps for lunch without buying the little bags? Take out a portion from the big bag at home and carry it to school in a reusable bag or lunchbox. Explain to the students that buying in bulk is preferable for other products as well. What other products are suitable to buy in bulk? (soft drinks, laundry detergents, etc)

Conclusion

Buying in bulk is preferable in terms of waste (less packaging) and is cheaper in the long run.

47

(T) Activity 25: What is the Difference?

All ages, 45 min

Aim

The students see the effects of pollution through discussing the polluted and clean city pictured in the student book and the impact pollution has on air, soil, water and health (of people and animals).

Materials

Student book.

Preparation

During this activity the students work in pairs. Explain how to draw up a mind map if needed.

Description of the activity

The students choose to make a mind map of either a clean city or a polluted city. Put at the centre the word ‘clean city’ or ‘polluted city’ and brainstorm about the effect of the absence or presence of waste on the environment, air, water, food, and animals and people’s health. The students can use the student book to observe the effects of a polluted or clean city.

When the students are finished, the teacher writes a class mind map on the whiteboard. The students share what they wrote and the teacher explains the effects of waste on our world and our lives. Examples of the mind maps are displayed below.

Conclusion

Students become aware of the impact pollution has on air, soil, water and health of living beings.

48
Dirty soil Flies Everywhere Sick Animals and People Sick People Dirt and Waste on the streets Polluted air No Bins Few crops growing Dirty Community Polluted water/ waste Contaminated food River Mindmap 8 Clean soil Healthy food No flies Healthy animals people Happy people Clean and Green nature Fresh air Bins Many crops growing Clean Community Clean water/ river waste Mindmap 7

(D) Activity 26: Happy Green Phillipines Game

All ages, 30 min

Aim

Students learn about the issues relating to waste by playing the Happy Green Philippines game on waste.

Materials

Happy Green Philippines board game, pawns and dice.

Preparation

The teacher explains the instructions of the board game, which are written on the back of the game. The teacher divides the students into groups of 3-4 and provides the pawns and dice.

Description of the activity

The students play the Happy Green Philippines board game and share what they have learned once they are finished playing the game.

49
What can you do to avoid single use items? Letʻs reduce our waste by making smart choices. A little preparation goes a long way! When you go to... When you go to the... CAFE SCHOOL RESTAURANT reusable metal straw Ice cream in a disposable cup or or I in a cone Packaged fruit Loose fruit soap Bar of soap or shampoo Soap or shampoo dispensers or or Dine-in Take Away or or container Online purchase + delivery Buy at your local shop with your own bag @ Small packets of chips or cookies Buy in bulk family pack Board Game Instructions (front page) The object of the game is to be the first one to land on finish. Roll the dice, the highest roll starts. Take turns rolling the dice and move the counter accordingly. If you land on a letter, follow the instructions on the left. If you land on a space that is already occupied, you knock off the player already there. That playerʼs counter will have to go back to START Pick the option that produces less waste bring your own... (more than 1 option possible) reusable produce bags reusable mug lunch box SPORT CLUB = fruit Have fun! shopping bag Coffee Make your own dice You need one dice, and one counter per player (between 2-8 players). Copy this figure onto paper or cardboard. Cut it out and bend the corners. Fold it so it has 6 sides and glue it together.

(D) Activity 27: Reactions of Materials to Soil, Water and Air

All ages, 45 min

Aim

The students discover how different substances react to being buried: by rusting, rotting, sprouting or staying the same. The students will learn the meaning of the words ‘compostable’ and ‘biodegradable’.

Preparation

• Teacher brings the requested materials to school.

• Divide the students into groups.

• Wear gloves when handling soil, and always wash your hands thoroughly afterwards.

• Be careful when students are using plastic bags.

• Note that this activity can be messy.

Materials

A pot of soil or access to a garden, a spade or trowel, paper, coloured pencils, plastic bags, sticks, nuts, dried beans, a glass bottle, paperclips, wood, fruits or vegetables like onions or potatoes.

Description of the activity

1. Each group of students chooses different items to bury.

2. The students draw the items before they bury them, for later comparison.

3. The students bury the items. Mark the items with a stick in order to find them later. Note: give some water every week. Some plants, like beans and onions, need water to sprout.

4. After about 3 weeks, the students go back and dig up the items they buried.

5. The students draw the items again. How much have they changed from the original drawings? Discuss the results with the students.

6. Teach the meanings of ‘compostable’ and ‘biodegradable’ by using the buried examples. Compostable waste means that it can be broken down over time by micro-organisms living in the earth. Examples of biodegradable waste is vegetables, fruit and paper waste.

Is the item not changing much over time? Then it is biodegradable. Examples are aluminum cans, plastic containers and rubber tyres. These items will take many years to break down, break down in micro pieces or never break down at all.

7. If the items started to grow, like the onion, take care of them by giving them water and sunlight. Put the plants in pots and place them in the classroom.

Conclusion

Items react differently when placed in soil. Some sprout, others decay and turn into soil again or do not change at all. Compostable items break down completely by micro organism. Biodegradable items take much longer to break down or fall apart in micro pieces like micro plastics.

50

(T) Activity 28: Decomposition Times

All ages, 45 min

Aim

The students discover that nature can decompose waste and how long it takes for sun, wind and rain to decompose materials.

Decomposing times

Preparation

Make sure the internet is working to show the movie ‘Gloop’.

Materials

Information Source: US National Park Service

Paper, a piece of fruit, a glass bottle, cans, a plastic bottle, juice box, internet access.

Description of the activity

First the YouTube movie “Gloop” is shown to the students. Then the teacher asks the students to repeat the dangers the plastics cause.

Explain that most products are biodegradable which means they can be decomposed by bacteria and other living organism. Non-biodegradable means the product, like a plastic bag, stays in nature forever as it is not biodegradable and breaks down into tiny pieces. These very small pieces can harm wildlife and pollute our oceans. They are called micro plastics.

Decomposition is a process of breaking down organic matter physically and chemically by bacterial or fungal action. Often it takes a long time for nature to decompose materials. If you discard a soda can on the beach, it can takes up to 500 years for wind, sunlight, water and bacteria to decompose the materials. However, a banana peel only takes 3 to 4 weeks to

51
Banana 3 to 4 weeks Paper bag 1 month Cotton rag 5 months Wool sock 1 year Cigarette butt 2 to 5 years Rubber sole (of a boot) 50 to 80 years Tin can (soup or vegetable can) 80 to 100 years Aluminium can (soda pop can) Disposable diapers 200 to 500 years 450 years Plastic bottle 500 - 1000 years unknown - forever? Glass bottle unknown - forever? Leather boot 40 to 50 years

decompose. Usually product with short decomposing times are named compostables.

The teacher writes a mind map on decomposition times on the white board and let the students come up with the different decomposition times. Make use of the mind map below. Please draw pictures of the different materials for young students to be able to understand well. Mention explicitly that climate and weather conditions have an impact on how ‘quickly’ an item decomposes. The more sunshine, rain, wind and bacteria, the faster the decomposing process.

The students form groups of 2 or 3 and start answering the following questions:

1. What happens when we throw waste in nature or in a landfill? (It will stay there for a long time, having bad effect on soil, water and air.)

2. What is the decomposition time of a banana, a glass bottle, a paper bag and a plastic bottle?

3. Which product takes the longest to decompose? (fruits and green waste)

4. Which one the slowest? (styrofoam)

5. What will happen to plastics? Does it decompose quickly or slowly compared to a banana? (Plastics never completely disappear, it breaks down into smaller and smaller pieces, called microplastics).

6. What is decomposing the materials? (sun, wind, worms, bacteria)

7. What is styrofoam?

This material is non-biodegradable, meaning it stays in nature forever! Try never to use this material.

8. Always throw your waste in the bin and start sorting into recyclable, biodegradable, and non-recyclable.

Conclusion

Products have different decomposing times. Compostable products have shorter decomposing times than non-biodegradable products.

52

(D) Activity 29: Making a Jump Rope

All ages, 45 min

Aim

Students learn how to reuse waste products by making a jump rope.

Materials

Plastic bags, scissors, tape and a heavy object.

Preparation

Please be sure the students are careful when working with plastic bags and scissors.

Make a rope in advance to show the students.

Description of the activity

Students reuse plastic bags to make a jump rope. Demonstrate how to make a jump rope by showing an already made sample. Then let the students follow the steps written below to make their own jump rope.

1. Cut the handles off the plastic bags and slit open the sides.

2. Cut the plastic bags into 2 to 3 cm strips, starting at the bottom and ending at the top opening.

3. Gather three (or six) strips and knot them together about 8 cm from the end.

4. Secure the knot under a table leg or have someone hold it, and braid the three strips until you are about 5 inches from the end.

5. Tape three more strips of plastic to the ends of the braided strips and continue braiding.

6. Repeat this process until the jump rope is as long as you want, knotting the strips together about 5 inches from the end.

7. If desired, tape the ends together to form handles.

When the students are finished, they can jump with their jump ropes during the break.

Conclusion

The students learn to make new products from used materials.

53

(D) Activity 30: Rotary EndPlasticSoup Trash(ure) Hunt

All ages 60 min

Aim

The students discover that a clean environment can be fun.

Materials

Collecting bags, plastic gloves, trash pickers (when available), a PRIZE, a mobile phone (for option 1).

Preparation

A map (option 2) showing directions to find the path towards the treasure.

Description of the activity

1. Option 1: use the Plastic Bingo app (free download on your mobile) and find as many of the 16 objects as you can find.

2. Option 2: create and use a map dividing the area with a prize (= treasure) at the end. Make a story of the hunt.

3. Option 3: use a separate bag to collect for waste where the brand name can be seen (or use the the Litterati app to make pictures of these items). Count these items per brand and report them to your teacher. Totals can be sent to the #Breakfreefromplastic brand audit or via happygreenphilippines@endplasticsoup.org

4. Option 4: make a ‘Trash date’ and ask a small group (2-4) to do this once per week for a whole month or every day next week. Find out with each other what you can do to let people clean up and not litter.

5. Option 5: collect cigarette buts, count and report the number, and put them in a basket or bag to show and tell everyone that 1 single butt poisons 40 liter of water.

The students are going to clean the area ‘as a game’ using one of the five options - in an area close to the school such as a park or a strip of beach or forest. The students clean the chosen are with plastic gloves and plastic waste bags. When finished, the students return to a selected assembly point or to the classroom and separate the waste into the bins according to the agreed categories: glass, green waste, paper, plastic, metal, and rest waste. Make sure the students wash their hands after the activity.

Back in the classroom, students celebrate the one who has won the game, or found the most interesting waste product. The students set rules for keeping the area of the school and the playgrounds clean:

- Keep the area clean.

- Always throw waste like paper, cans and food leftovers in the waste bin.

- Do not discard waste on the streets or in the environment. Keep it with you until you find a waste bin.

- Start picking up trash that was left behind… do not leave it for others to do, be a waste HERO.

54

- Provide waste bins and place them in the schoolyard, halls and homes.

- Bring food to school in organic packaging like banana leaves or reusable items, like reusable lunch boxes and mugs: no ‘single use’ packaging: Bring Your Own: BYO.

- Bring your own bag when going to shops.

- Start using separate bins to sort waste.

- Reduce, reuse and recycle.

- Enjoy a tidy place and beautiful nature.

In the coming days the students follow the rules they have set to reduce waste in the area.

When finished, the students can create a poster which can be displayed at school. Don’t forget to include the ‘before and after’ picture and the chosen rules. Make pictures of the game and the celebration, and send them to happygreenphilippines@endplasticsoup.org.

Conclusion

Students know how to take care of their environment and enjoy doing it.

55

(D) Activity 31: Recycling paper

All ages, 60 min

Aim

The students learn how to recycle paper.

Preparation

Teacher makes sure that all needed materials are available. Students bring waste paper from home.

Materials

Scissors, waste paper, big bowls, wooden spoon, framework, wire mesh such as chicken wire (with very small holes), pieces of cloth, heavy object to press onto the paper sheet.

Description of the activity

Paper is used a lot nowadays. We use it for newspapers, magazines, posters, notebooks, cardboard boxes and books. Paper is made from trees and is part of our everyday lives. We cannot imagine living without paper. Paper makes up over 30% of our waste stream, making it the material that we throw away most. This means that for every 100 kilos of waste we throw away, about 30 kilos of it is paper. If we could recycle more newspapers, we could save more trees from being cut down and greatly improve the oxygen level in the air!

Recycling paper is the process of turning used paper into new paper products. It can be turned into newspapers and notebooks, but also paper towels and toilet paper. The process of recycling paper is quite easy, and the students can even do this at home.

The students can now start to recycle paper. This process will take some time to be finished completely.

1. The students work in small groups. On their table is a bucket and waste paper. Each group either cuts or tears the paper into small pieces.

2. The students put the pieces in a bucket and add some water, stir it occasionally. Leave it in the water till it becomes pulp or mix it with a mixer (if available) till it turns into pulp.

3. Make a sieve: make a framework and attach the wire mesh to the framework. It is easier to use an existing sieve. The teacher helps the students with the use of the sieve.

4. Sieve the pulp, shake it so the pulp is spread evenly and let the water drain until the sheet has some body, meaning that it is the thickness of a piece of paper with no see-through parts.

5. Put a cloth on top of the sheet and turn it around and put another cloth on top of it.

6. Let it dry while pressing heavy books on top for 2 hours or take it through a press.

7. Lift the object carefully, and there is your self-made paper sheet! Leave it in the sun to allow it to fully dry.

Conclusion

Students know how to recycle paper from paper waste.

56

(D) Activity 32: Compost Game

All ages, 30 min

Aim

The compost game will lead to a better understanding of which ‘ingredients’ turn into compost.

Materials

One red and one green piece of paper for each child.

Preparation

The teacher makes sure each child has a green and a red piece of paper on his or her table. These papers can be reused when the students make posters during other activities! If this is not available, the teacher can ask the students to say Yes or No out loud when answering the questions.

Description of the activity

The teacher will ask the students questions about which items can turn into compost.

The students respond by showing the green if the answer is ‘Yes’ or the red card for ‘No’. The students can think back to the story of Cellio the compost worm. The items Cellio likes are used to make compost.

The teacher starts to call out the following materials and asks for an explanation of the given answers.

• Apple (yes, Cellio like fruits and they will turn into compost)

• Meat (no, it will attract animals to the compost heap to eat the meat)

• Leaves (yes, leaves will turn into compost)

• Plastics (no, plastics will not turn into compost)

• Oil (no, the compost heap will rot)

• Tomato (yes, Cellio loves vegetables)

• Paper (yes, but only a little)

• Bread (no, it will start to rot and it will attract animals to the heap)

• Grass (yes, grass will turn into compost)

• Tea and coffee (yes, tea leaves and coffee beans will turn into compost)

• Fish (no, Cellio does not like fish and fish will attract animals to the compost heap)

• Wood (yes, small branches make a perfect ingredient for the compost heap)

• Continue to name all sorts of fruits or vegetables (yes, Cellio loves them)

The teacher explains that when you put all the approved items (which are called organic waste) on a big heap, they will break down into compost after 3 to 6 months, depending on the climate. It takes more time to make compost in colder than in warmer climates. The compost can be used to grow flowers, plants, trees, vegetables and herbs in.

From now on, the students start to bring organic waste (like fruits) from their lunch boxes to the compost bins at school.

Conclusion

The students have learned which sorts of biodegradable waste is suitable to turn into compost.

57

(D) Activity 33: Planting Seeds and/or Trees

All ages, 60 min

Aim

The students plant seeds and take care of them while growing.

Materials

Compost, pots, a variety of blue and green felt or paper, cotton balls and white glue, used cups, plastic bottles and seeds.

Preparation

Mix the self-made compost with sand or potting soil. The students bring empty plastic bottles or yoghurt cups to school.

Description of the activity

If you are using a plastic bottle, start by cutting the top off of the bottle (10 cm from the top) and poke four holes in the bottom. If you are using a yoghurt pot, just put the holes into the bottom of the pot. The students can decorate their pots in a variety of ways, using nature as an inspiration. The students fill the bottom of the bottle with small rocks and the remainder with potting soil. Then the bottles are ready for seeds to be planted inside, by sprinkling them on the soil, patting them down gently, and pouring a little water onto the soil.

Place the pots in the classroom so everyone can see the sprouting of the seeds. Make sure the plants get sunlight and water the plant once every 2 or 3 days.

If you are planning to plant trees, discuss with the students the underestimated importance of trees. You can use the following benefits of trees:

• trees provide oxygen and absorb carbon dioxide (CO2 which is a greenhouse gas).

• trees provide shade, cool the air and retain moisture in the soil.

• trees reduce soil erosion.

• trees provide housing for animals and increases biodiversity.

• trees provide fruits and medicine.

• trees provide construction materials and fuel like fire wood and charcoal.

• falling leaves provide nutrients to the soil.

• trees have a positive impact on our mental health.

Have an age appropriate conversation with you students about the importance of trees using some or all of the qualities mentioned. Take the students for a walk and let them explore the plants and trees in the area. Teach them how important plants and trees are for life on earth.

Conclusion

Students understand the importance of plants and trees to sustain life on earth for humans and animals.

58

(A) Activity 34: Honour the Planet

All ages, time: 30 min

Aim

To become aware of the importance and beauty of nature.

Preparation

The teachers chooses a movie on nature broadcasted by YouTube. Choose from the following movies:

1. “Planet Earth: What a Wonderful World”

2. “20 World Most Beautiful Places” – Keksinnot

Materials

Internet, YouTube movie.

Description of the activity

The teacher shows the YouTube video to the students. When the video is finished the teacher asks them to think of a holiday they enjoyed or a place outdoors that they love to go. Ask them to visualise it and share that experience with the class. The teacher can asks questions such as:

- How did you feel being at that special place?

- Would you like to go there again?

- Do you think it will still be the same after many years?

- Do you think the place will then be still beautiful or will it be polluted ?

- What can you do to keep it clean and green?

Conclusion

Explain that we cannot live without the planet and all that nature offers us. We rely on air, water and food, which all comes from our planet. If we do not take care of our surroundings and nature, the forests, oceans and mountains will be polluted and spoiled for the next generations to come. Please produce less waste, reuse, recycle the waste you produce and make sure to discard waste in the bin so it doesn’t end up on the land or in our waterways.

59

Dictionary

Compost: Fertile soil which is a mixture of rotting plant and food scraps (green waste) used to improve soil structure and provide nutrients to flowers, plants and trees.

Decompose: To break down into smaller parts; for example, an apple will rot and turn back into the nutrients (soil) it was made from.

Environment: Everything that surrounds a living thing and affects its growth and health.

Waste or litter: Anything that is thrown away (discarded) because it is not wanted or is considered worthless.

Hazardous Waste: Waste that is dangerous to a person’s health.

Landfill: A site for disposing solid waste on land.

Mind map: A diagram used to represent words, ideas, tasks, or other items linked to and arranged around a central key word or idea (which is written in the middle). Mind maps are used to brainstorm, visualise, structure, and classify ideas.

Plastic soup: A huge area of mostly plastic waste floating in the oceans.

Recycle: To put a used object or material through a process that makes it into something new. This keeps the object or material from being entered into the waste stream.

Reduce: To use an item less or not at all, according to your needs and possibilities. We can use less packaging by bringing our own plastic bag to the shop and therefore reducing plastic waste.

Reuse: To use an item again, for the same or a different purpose; for example, we can reuse plastic grocery bags as bin liners.

Rot: To decay; green waste in a compost bin will rot and become fertiliser.

Soil: The fertile top layer of the earth’s surface in which plants grow; a nutrient-rich type of dirt used in gardens and potted plants.

Sustainable: Conserving an ecological balance by avoiding the depletion of natural resources for next generations.

60
61 Notes

The Happy Green World Foundation raises awareness on environmental topics by developing educational programs on waste, water and energy.

The Happy Green Philippines Program is a tool to teach children of primary schools how to refuse, reduce, reuse and recycle waste.

The program includes a Activity Guide, Student Book and Board Game. These resources can be used together or separately. All materials are easy to teach, practical, interactive, colourful and fun.

You can order your Happy Green Philippines Program at happygreenphilippines@endplasticsoup.org

Activity Guide

Student book Game

Together working towards a cleaner and greener world!

www.happygreenworld.org

Happy Green World

ISBN:

9789083299181
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.