Sustainable Materials: NM-NUM.6-8.1 Number and Operations
Sustainable Materials: NM-NUM.6-8.1 Number and Operations
Sustainable Materials: NM-NUM.6-8.1 Number and Operations
INTRODUCTION
This lesson explains alternative building supplies that are not only better for the environment but
also healthier for the occupants of the building. Students will discover the cost difference between
conventional wood and FSC-certified wood.
LESSON OVERVIEW
Grade Level & Subject: Grade 6-8; Mathematics and Science
Objectives:
After completing this lesson, students will be able to:
• Calculate the financial and environmental costs and benefits of several types of building
materials.
• Compare the costs associated with traditional building materials and sustainable materials.
• Predict what happens to construction materials when something is demolished or destroyed.
• Discuss the health benefits of green building.
• List materials that make up a house and find green alternatives that could be used.
1
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• Natural hazards
• Risks and benefits
• Science and technology in society
Materials Needed:
• Reproducible #1 - Railroad Tracks (image to be copied or projected for class)
• Reproducible #2 - Railroad Tracks Discussion Questions
• Reproducible #3 - Sustainable Building Material Reading Handout (2 pages)
• Reproducible #4 - Calculating FSC Certified Wood Costs
• Reproducible #5 - Sustainable Materials Homework
LESSON BACKGROUND
Relevant Vocabulary:
• Sustainable – able to be continued indefinitely with little or no impact on the future.
• Energy efficiency – obtained when the least amount of energy is consumed to do the most
amount of useful work; when energy is not wasted or released as useless heat.
• VOC – Volatile Organic Compound – organic chemical compounds which have high vapor
pressures under normal circumstances; capable of entering the gas phase in normal conditions;
participate in atmospheric photochemical reactions.
• Byproduct - a secondary or incidental product often generated as a consequence of an industrial
or manufactured process.
• Impermeable – the quality of being impenetrable to liquids.
• Estuary – semi-enclosed coastal body of water with a free connection to the open sea; the wide
part of a river where it nears the sea and fresh water mixes with salt water.
• Consumer – one who uses goods and services.
• Formaldehyde – an organic chemical compound with the formula H2CO; colorless odorless gas
made by the oxidation of methanol.
• Conventional – traditional or common; conforming with or meeting accepted standards.
• Certified – endorsed by an authority as having met certain requirements.
Information:
See Reproducible #3 - Sustainable Building Material Reading Handout (2 pages) for
Sustainable Building Material background information.
LESSON STEPS
Warm-up: Reduce, Reuse and Recycle
(To save paper, display the handouts and picture on an overhead or SMART Board and then email
your students copies of the material!)
1. Display the visual in Reproducible #1 – Railroad Tracks. Ask students to imagine
that the tracks are no longer used and are going to be torn out and demolished. You can
hand out Reproducible #2 – Railroad Tracks Discussion Questions and have the
students answer questions individually, in small groups, or as a class. You may want to
lead a class discussion without handing out the sheet. Try to guide the students towards
answering that the wood and metal from the railroad tracks could be recycled or reused
in another capacity. These discussion questions should be used to encourage
brainstorming and to get students to begin thinking about alternative building options.
CONCLUSION
Students should now be comfortable having a discussion about the pros and cons of green building.
They should be able to give suggestions for greener alternative to traditional materials and site
examples of not only the environmental benefits they provide, but the health ones as well.
3. Do you think the materials could be used for something else? If so, what?
5. What are examples of alternatives that could be used to build a healthier or more sustainable
house? (Example: bamboo instead of hardwood flooring)
6. What effect would using these materials have on the environment? Health?
There are sustainable alternatives to most (if not all) construction materials. A building can
be called sustainable depending on its energy efficiency, water use, waste creation and
reduction, toxins in the material, sustainable materials, and indoor air quality.
It’s Healthier. Buildings built using sustainable materials provide occupants with good
lighting, acoustics, and air quality for a more comfortable, healthier, and a more productive
work environment. In the context of green schools, more than 70% of executives believe
that buildings made of sustainable materials enhance student performance and the ability to
retain teachers.
To name a few examples, most conventional paints contain high levels of VOCs (volatile
organic compounds) which produce a gas that can be inhaled by occupants. Most
conventional insulation contains the toxic element formaldehyde.
Asthma is the most common chronic disorder in childhood currently affecting an estimated
6.2 million children under 18. It costs three times more to provide health care for a child
with asthma than for one without. A recent review by Carnegie Mellon of five separate
studies evaluating the impact of improved indoor air quality on asthma found an average
reduction of 38.5% in asthma in buildings with improved air quality. Therefore it is safe to
assume that the transition from a conventionally built to a green school reduces asthma
attacks by 25%.3
It’s Green. Sustainable materials are also more environmentally friendly than ordinary
building materials. Byproducts of conventional building materials can cause harm to the
building’s occupants and infect the surrounding natural habitat due to runoff from the
building. Choosing to use sustainable and efficient materials reduces our footprint on the
environment as it saves trees and manages waste, water, and energy production.
Buildings and parking lots are built with impermeable materials that replace the natural
surfaces of the ground. Therefore, runoff from the building pollutes the surrounding
environment, including water resources. In fact, it has been recognized as the second leading
source of impairment in estuaries, third in lakes, and fourth in rivers.4
2
UN Documents Cooperation Circles: Our Common Future, Chapter 2: Towards Sustainable Development. http://www.un-documents.net/ocf-
02.htm
3
Katz, Gregory. Greening America’s Schools: Cost and benefits. http://www.cap-e.com/ewebeditpro/items/O59F9819.pdf
4
EPA: Green Building FAQ. http://www.un-documents.net/wced-ocf.htm
3. What could be done to encourage people to buy sustainable materials instead of conventional
materials?
5
GreenerBuildings.com: “Big Growth Spurt in U.S. Schools Going Green” http://www.greenerbuildings.com/news/2008/08/29/big-growth-spurt-
us-schools-going-green
Example: If you spent $100 on conventional wood, in what range would you expect to
pay for the same amount of FSC-certified wood?
Repeat the same steps for the mid-range and high estimate
2. Do you feel the extra cost is worth the benefit of buying FSC certified wood? Explain.
3. How would you convince someone to buy FSC certified wood for their project if they did
not want to spend the extra money?
1
9wood.com. FSC, LEED, & Sustainability. http://www.9wood.com/articles/leed_and_fsc.html
4. How is it made?
Resources or Websites: