Using Waste-Free Wednesdays & Litterless Lunches as Educational Tools

May 30th, 2011 by Sarah

This lunch is “waste-free” because it was packed in a reusable lunch bag with reusable utensils, containers, and a cloth napkin. Image courtesy of the Resourceful Schools Project.

This lunch is “wasteful” because it was packed in a paper bag, has plastic utensils, a paper napkin, and lots of disposable packaging around the food items. Image courtesy of the Resourceful Schools Project.

Last week, our blog discussed some of the benefits of managing cafeteria waste and launching a “Waste-Free Wednesdays” or “Litterless Lunches” program at your school.  But starting a lunchtime waste reduction program is only the beginning!  There are many lesson plans and classroom activities that can help teachers turn these programs into systemic, educational tools.

A great way to get students involved in these programs is to turn lunchtime waste reduction into a competition between grades.  Before announcing the launch of a “Waste-Free Wednesday” or “Litterless Lunches” program, teachers or parent volunteers can begin weighting the amount of waste generated during each lunch period to establish a baseline.  When the program is launched, share the results with students and challenge each grade to reduce their waste by the greatest percentage in the school.  The winning grade can be rewarded with an extra recess period, which would also promote healthy lifestyles and physical activity.

To make the program more manageable and engaging, once it is launched teachers can supervise student as they weigh their lunch periods waste.  Math classes throughout the school can get involved by keeping track of the weights, calculating the percentages, comparing them to those of other grade levels and by calculating the amount of money their family saves by reducing, reusing, and recycling over time . Science classes can study how long it takes different materials to decompose, what factors influence the rate of decomposition, and the impacts waste has on our environment.  “Waste-Free Wednesday” and “Litterless Lunch” programs teach students the principles of Reduce-Reuse-Recycle and can be used to help develop environmental stewards in younger generations.

The following resources will help incorporate your “Waste-Free Wednesdays,” “Litterless Lunches,” or waste management program into your class lessons:

  • “Nature Recycles: Shouldn’t We All” Lesson Plan & Online Activity – This lesson was prepared as a pre and post learning activity for a field study at Hard Bargain Farm or another environmental facility, but can also be used if teachers sort lunch waste as a part of a classroom activity.  The pre-lesson utilizes online activities that include packing a digital “Trash Free Lunch, comparing and ranking lunches, and “Trash Sorting.”  After the waste the class produced during lunch is sorted and weighed, the post-lesson activity instructs students to fill out a Lunch Trash Data Analysis Worksheet and to have a discussion about what they have learned.
  • Biology Bottle: Decomposition Bottle – Have your students explore decomposition in a two liter soda bottle. This website provides instructions on how to construct a “Decomposition Column” and provides tips for how to use it as a teaching tool. Teachers can use this tool to teach about decomposition, waste management, recycling, and more
  • EPA’s Did You Pack a Waste-Free Lunch Worksheet – This worksheet has students compare the reusable, recyclable, compostable, and waste materials in their lunches before and after the implementation of a cafeteria waste reduction program, and can be used to challenge them to individually reduce the amount of trash they generate.
  • NOAA’s Protect Our Ocean Activity Book – Activities in this book are designed to teach students in Grades K-3 about the ocean, why it is important, and marine debris.  Through word searches, games, and coloring pages, students will also learn about Litterless Lunches, how long it takes trash to decompose in the ocean, and marine sanctuaries.
  • Ocean and You Educator Resources: Sorting Trash – This lesson focuses on teaching students about how long it takes different types of trash to decay in the ocean.  It also features some great posters illustrating the time it takes for marine debris to decay.
  • EPA’s Teachers Resources on Waste – This website acts as a clearing house for EPA curriculum and activity resources that focus on waste.  Resources are organized by school level (grades k-5, 6-8, and 9-12) to help teachers find lessons that are appropriate for their class.
  • Clean Sweep USA Lesson Plans – These lesson plans for grades 6-8 address topics on waste management, source reduction, reducing volume in landfills, composting, recycling, waste-to-energy facilities, littering, and beautification.
Sarah Brzezinski works for the Chesapeake Research Consortium as the Chesapeake Bay Program's Fostering Stewardship and Education Workgroup Team Staffer. She also serves as the content manager of Bay Backpack.

Why Manage Cafeteria Waste?

May 23rd, 2011 by Sarah

Pupils putting their food waste into the school wormery at Seaton Primary School. Image courtesy of Ashden Award, Creative Commons

In 2009, Americans produced about 243 million tons of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW), or trash that is commonly used then thrown away.  MSW can be made up of things that come from our homes, hospitals, businesses, and schools, such as packaging, grass clippings, furniture, paint, batteries, appliances, clothes, food scraps, and newspapers.  According to the EPA’s report on MSW Generation, Recycling, and Disposal in the United States in 2009, on average, every American produced about 4.3 pounds of waste per day.

In our schools, this waste can come from many sources and activities, including lunches.  There are many fun, educational ways that we can work to reduce the amount of waste that is generated in school cafeterias. One great idea teachers and schools can promote is “Waste-Free Wednesdays” or “Litterless Lunches.”  Schools that have “Waste-Free Wednesday” programs encourage parents and students to pack Wednesday lunches that do not produce any trash while “Litterless Lunches” can be conducted throughout the week. Both programs encourage students to reduce food scraps, eliminate disposable packaging materials, and encourage the use of reusable utensils, napkins, and food and drink containers.  Schools themselves are also encouraged to decrease the waste that is produced from school-sold lunches, for example, by replacing disposable Styrofoam trays with reusable ones.

Cafeteria waste reduction programs have many benefits.  They can be used to start composting initiatives, so students do not have to count apple cores and banana peels as a part of the waste they generated. Student participation in school recycling programs may increase as a result of effective initiatives.  Reducing the amount of waste that is produced in the cafeteria can also help reduce the amount of money school systems have to spend on waste management.

Here are some great resources to help you start a “Waste-Free Wednesdays” or “Litterless Lunches” program at your school:

  • WasteFreeLunches.org – Learn about the basics of waste free lunches, success stories, case studies, research, and tools for change on this website.  The website also features tips for parents who want to get their families involved in reducing lunchtime waste.
  • EPA’s Pack a Waste-Free Lunch Website – This resource includes a waste-free lunch poster, three poster activities, tips for getting parents involved (including a sample letter to inform parents about the initiative), and a list of additional resources.
  • Rethinking School Lunches – This guide from the Center for Ecoliteracy aims to help “improve school food, teach nutrition, support sustainable food systems, and create and education program focused on understanding the relationships between food, culture, health, and the environment.”  The guide also includes a waste management chapter.
  • EPA’s Waste Educational Materials – This website refers teachers to sites that provide them with basic facts about waste, information on composting and recycling, curriculum and activities, and student awards and grants.  The website also features programs including Tools to Reduce Waste in Schools, Schools Chemical Cleanout, and Eco-Schools USA.

Stay tuned: Next week, we will share some resources to help you incorporate your cafeteria’s waste management program into your classroom lessons!

Sarah Brzezinski works for the Chesapeake Research Consortium as the Chesapeake Bay Program's Fostering Stewardship and Education Workgroup Team Staffer. She also serves as the content manager of Bay Backpack.

Is Your Class Ready for Endangered Species Day?

May 16th, 2011 by Sarah

The Delmarva Fox Squirrel, image courtesy of U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service - Northeast Region via Creative Commons.

The Bog Turtle, image courtesy of USFWS/Southeast via Creative Commons.

That’s right Backpackers: this Friday, May 20th is Endangered Species Day!  Endangered Species Day, which was started by the United States Senate, is held every year on the third Friday in May.  The day is held to encourage people, both young and old, to learn about species that are facing the possibility of extinction, about the conservation issues that impact their species survival, and about what we can do in our everyday lives to make a difference.

When asked about endangered species many of your students will instantly be able to identify well known species such as lions and tigers and polar bears (oh my!).  While this knowledge is a great thing for them to have and expand on, another fun way to engage your students in learning about endangered species is to “bring it local.”  Panda bears and gorillas may look adorable, but sometimes the large geographic distance between these animals native habitats and your school may leave students with a disconnect between the idea of what and endangered species is and their own actions.

This year, why not spend Endangered Species Day teaching about endangered plants and animals that live right here in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed?  Here are a few species you could feature in your lesson, or have your students write a research paper on:

  • Bog Turtle – This small, semi-aquatic species of turtle is currently listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act and is classified as endangered in some states.
  • Delmarva Fox Squirrel – The Delmarva Fox Squirrel is a large, endangered squirrel species that live in small, isolated populations on the Delmarva Peninsula, which represents a fraction of its historical geographic range.
  • Shortnose Sturgeon – Shortnose Sturgeon became endangered species as a result of drastic population declines primarily due to environmental factors such as dams and pollution in the rivers and streams where they spawn.
  • Maryland Darter – This two to three inch long species of fish is possibly extinct.  The last confirmed sighting of the species was in 1988.

For additional information on endangered species in the Chesapeake Bay Watershed, please refer to the following sources:

Here are some resources that have been developed through a partnership with the Endangered Species Coalition’s (ESC) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service that can help you teach about endangered species in your classroom this Friday:

Sarah Brzezinski works for the Chesapeake Research Consortium as the Chesapeake Bay Program's Fostering Stewardship and Education Workgroup Team Staffer. She also serves as the content manager of Bay Backpack.

The Chesapeake Conservation Corps

May 9th, 2011 by Colleen

Members of the first class of the Chesapeake Conservation Corps took a break from planting trees to pose for a photo with Congressman Sarbanes. Photo courtesy of the Chesapeake Bay Trust.

This past November, sixteen bright young adults were inducted into the inaugural Chesapeake Conservation Corps class. They were placed with environmental and conservation/community based host organizations throughout the Chesapeake Bay watershed, from the DC Metro area out to the Eastern Shore. It has been six months, and the halfway point of the yearlong term of service. I am one of those sixteen corps members, here to give you just a small taste of what I have been working on and working towards with my host organization.

I was placed with the Alice Ferguson Foundation (AFF), a leading environmental education nonprofit within the Potomac River Watershed, located on a beautiful farm in the D.C. Metro area. I could go on and on about the great things AFF is doing (including litter cleanups, field science trips, and farm field trips) but you can check out their website, fergusonfoundation.org for more information. Through my position as the Trash Free Schools Intern, I was assigned the task of creating a project based on waste reduction and education, and had to create a pilot to implement in local schools. Currently I am working with four Prince George’s County pilot schools by facilitating waste assessments, formulating goals, and developing action plans to help reduce, reuse, and recycle within their schools. This is the first specific program designed to address the issue of trash for schools located within the Chesapeake Bay watershed.  I hope my project will empower students to create visible changes within their own lives, and raise awareness for the need for improved waste management and education within schools.

This is the first project that I have ever created in a professional sense; and I feel a great sense of ownership and pride in the steps I have made in the short six months I have been here. I am quickly learning the ways of the public school system, as well as education in general; my background lies mainly in science and field-based conservation work, and I jumped at the opportunity to be able to gain experience in the environmental education field. In addition to my Trash Free Schools project, I also aid with Bridging the Watershed, our high school field science program; as well as Hard Bargain Farm, our elementary/middle school program, not to mention many other side projects.

I am lucky to be a part of the Chesapeake Conservation Corps; it has provided me with valuable lessons and experiences that are making a difference not only for my future, but for the future of the Chesapeake Bay community as well.

In May, Chesapeake Conservation Corps members worked with the Chesapeake Bay Trust to organize a tree planting event in the Heritage Harbor community. Photo courtesy of the Chesapeake Bay Trust.

The Chesapeake Bay Trust, in partnership with the State of Maryland and Constellation Energy, established the Chesapeake Conservation Corps in 2010 to provide service-learning opportunities and green job training for young people through environmental and energy conservation projects.

If you know any up and coming recent high school or college graduates that would like to participate in hands-on environmental, leadership and technical training opportunities, the Trust is soliciting applications for Corps Volunteers for 2011. All applications are due by 5 p.m. May 20, 2011, and with questions, contact Dr. Jana Davis at 410-974-2941, ext 101.

Colleen Higgins is a member of the Chesapeake Bay Trust's Chesapeake Conservation Corps program. After graduating from the Corps program, Colleen plans to pursue masters degrees focused on both Natural Resources and Urban and Regional Planning.

Tree Tape for Kids

May 2nd, 2011 by Sarah

The Tree Tape for Kids puts the CO2 sequestering power of trees into a context students can understand. Image courtesy of Nitipak Samsen.

Do you want to teach your students about the carbon sequestering power of trees? Putting this type of information into context can be quite a challenge.  Knowing how many grams of CO2 a tree can absorb may not have a lot of meaning to your students, and simply giving them the statistics is not particularly engaging.  This clever (and free) device from British designer Nitipak Samsen is just the thing to help!

The Tree Tape for Kids translates how much CO2 is absorbed by individual trees into the amount of time you spend doing various activities.  The Tree Tape will measure how much CO2 is absorbed by a tree and convert it into minutes on an airline flight, days of breathing, number of cheeseburgers, or amount of electricity (UK only).  For older, of age audiences, the Tree Tape can also tell you how much CO2 is absorbed by a tree per pint of lager.

Last Friday was Arbor Day, a great time to focus on teaching about trees. Using the Tree Tape for Kids in your schoolyard would be a great follow-up activity to add an educational component to last week’s festivities, or you could plan ahead for next year!  It is also a great tool to help you introduce lessons on global climate change.

The directions for this activity are simple: Just go to Mr. Samsen’s Tree Tape for Kids website and click “Create and Download.”  You will be asked how many Tree Tapes you would like to print per page, what type of tree you will be measuring (rainforest, hard wood, soft wood, or other, and what type of activity you would like to measure (air travel, breathing, ect.).  A .pdf file will be generated based on this information.  Print the Tree Tapes out and follow the easy assembly instructions that are provided on the Tree Tape website.  Use the Tree Tape to measure the girth of a tree 1.30 meters (4.27 feet) above the ground, and you will find out how much CO2 is sequestered by the tree based on the activity you chose.  Now get outside and enjoy!

Sarah Brzezinski works for the Chesapeake Research Consortium as the Chesapeake Bay Program's Fostering Stewardship and Education Workgroup Team Staffer. She also serves as the content manager of Bay Backpack.