Green Living Association My Green Campus', Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 To 7)
Green Living Association My Green Campus', Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 To 7)
Green Living Association My Green Campus', Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 To 7)
As part of global efforts to timely and effectively address the critical challenge of Climate Change,
Green Living Association has initiated a 3-yearly educational campaign 'Post COVID Climate' to
inspire young students and their families to work collectively to fulfil their valuable role in
combating the Climate Change and set an example for the rest of the world on how to achieve a
collective human goal with concrete and unified action. ‘My Green Campus’ is the first activity of
the three-yearly campaign with the aim of inspiring students, their families and school
administrations to work collectively to make their campus cleaner and greener. Without a doubt, by
keeping our homes, campuses and communities cleaner and greener, we can collectively contribute
to addressing the crucial dangers of Climate Change.
The 'My Green Campus' guidebooks cover a number of different topics, starting with the minimization of
litter and waste and followed by topics such as 3Rs, energy and water conservation, and finally establishing a
sustainable campus landscape. As your Green Campus programme evolves further themes will be
introduced in the next activities. In order to establish a Green Campus most effectively, we
encourage schools to resist taking on all themes at the same time. Schools begin by examining the
litter and waste theme and gradually improve their energy conservation, sustainable water use and
eventually establishing a sustainable campus landscape.
Establishing a comprehensive project ‘My Green Campus’ under the campaign ‘Post COVID Climate’
for the Green Stewards and their families had been a real challenge with its capacity to facilitate all
Green Stewards in their different educational grades, having diverse subjects and studying in varied
educational institutes. There were many aspects to make this happen however, GLA’s technical
team, our global partners and volunteer associates have nicely contributed in successfully
accomplishing the task.
And implementation of this project was never possible without active participation by the
dedicated administration of our Green Partner Schools, their Campuses, Green Stewards and the
Parents. We thank you and believe in your valuable association in making a new greener and
dynamic society.
All or parts of the guidebooks may be photocopied or printed providing it is for educational, non-
profit purposes only. No part may be otherwise reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval
system, or transmitted in any form by any means electronic, mechanical or recording without the
prior consent of Green Living Association.
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
What is Climate?
Weather describes the conditions outside right now in a specific place. For example, if
you see that it’s raining outside right now, that’s a way to describe today’s weather.
Rain, snow, wind, hurricanes, tornadoes — these are all weather events.
Climate, on the other hand, is more than just one or two rainy days. Climate describes
the weather conditions that are expected in a region at a particular time of year.
Earth’s climate has constantly been changing — even long before humans came into the
picture. However, scientists have observed unusual changes recently. For example,
Earth’s average temperature has been increasing much more quickly than they
would expect over the past 150 years.
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
Human activities — such as burning fossil fuel to power factories, cars and buses —
are changing the natural greenhouse. These changes cause the atmosphere to trap
more heat than it used to, leading to a warmer Earth.
While Coronavirus completely changed the world with its serious impacts on people's
health, global economies, people's lifestyles, and psychological well-being, global
humanity came to know certain benefits of the pandemic like never before which
include decrease in air pollution levels, environmental noise pollution reduction,
cleaner beaches and great reduction in the greenhouses gases emissions.
Our new campaign ‘Post COVID Climate’ is designed to conduct unique creative green
activities for schools students, parents and teachers to successfully address the
dangers of climate change based on the lessons learned from COVID-19.
‘My Green Campus’ is a unique activity that brings great knowledge and practical
ways to unite students, their families and campus administration to make your campus
greener and cleaner. In addition to making our homes, parks and communities
cleaner and greener, we can successfully address the global challenge of climate
change.
The Category 2 guidebook is especially designed for the Green Stewards in grades
4-7 which comprises the suitable activities for the students in this age group which
include Trash audit, Reduce, Reuse, Repair, Recycle and Compost.
Our first recommendation for Category-2 Green Stewards is to join on campus Green
Living Club, if it is already formed, or otherwise plan and implement your activities in a
group of likeminded Green Stewards to make those more productive.
The most
important part of
the green
teamwork is to
forge an action
plan that focuses
on one group-
oriented, long-
term project that
has measurable
benefits to the
school or community and that can keep the interest of the fellow Green Stewards
who will no doubt be spending long hours volunteering. To successfully run your green
project, members should develop a timeline that clearly lists goals, dates and
responsibilities.
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
Introduction to Trash
Parents have
asked their
children for
centuries, “Please
take out the
trash!” Trash is
anything that
homes and
businesses throw
away. It is old
food, bags, boxes,
jars, toys,
clothes, branches,
and furniture. It is paper, wood, cloth, metal, plastic, yard and food waste, and glass.
People have always had trash. The Greek city-state of Athens opened the first dump
more than 2,500 years ago. During the Middle Ages, people threw their trash out the
door. They didn’t know that rotting trash could make them sick.
In the 1700s, cities began collecting their trash to get it off the
streets and out of waterways. By the late 1800s, Europeans were
even burning their trash and using the energy to make electricity.
America was a little different. To the colonists, the land seemed
endless. When dumping on city streets became a problem, they
dumped their trash outside of town. In other areas of the world,
including South Asia, people used to dump their trash in the open
spare fields.
Activity
Ask designated members of your Green Living Club to discuss with students what
types of trash your school campus produces and how much trash is produced in the
campus each day.
By product—how the trash was used. The trash may be a potato chip bag, an old
shoe, or a broken toy. A plastic soda bottle and a soda can would be in the same group
because they are both containers. What do you think makes up most of the trash in
Pakistan? Paper? Plastics? Metals? The answer is paper followed by plastics.
Activity
The assigned members of the Green Living club are to look in the trash cans in the
classroom, office, bathroom, clinic, and cafeteria. Make a list or graphic organizer
showing the items found.
½ to 1 KG of Trash
Think about all the things you throw away
every day. You wake up in the morning and
eat breakfast. You throw away a napkin or a
wrapper or an empty cereal box. You go to
school. You use paper for math and reading.
In art, you use more paper. In the cafeteria
or canteen, the trash cans are filled with
disposable trays, juice boxes, sandwich bags,
paper napkins, and uneaten food. After school, you throw away more trash. By the end
of the day the average Pakistani has created around half KG of trash and the
ratio is continuously increasing. Multiply this by the trash produced by 220 million
fellow citizens and the number comes around 100 million KG or 10,000 tons. Then
add to it the waste produced by mills, factories, hotels and large offices. And then
think about the daily, weekly and monthly trash production. It is mainly because of the
increasing amount of trash that has become one of the critical challenges for the
metropolitan management of the large cities.
Activities
Have the team members keep a journal of all the trash they throw away in a day.
Weigh the amount of trash produced in the classroom every day for a week.
Kinds of Trash
Sometimes people who study trash find it more useful to know what waste was used
for, instead of what it was made from.
Containers/Packaging: This includes cans, jars, bags, bottles, boxes, and wrapping
materials. Containers and packaging form the biggest product category. Packaging is
the single largest product in the waste stream. Bread is wrapped in a plastic bag. Soup
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
comes in a can. Cookies are arranged on plastic trays that are slipped inside other
wrapping. Six bottles of soda or water are wrapped together in plastic or cardboard.
Yet packaging serves many useful purposes. The bread wrapper keeps the bread fresh
and clean. The soup can keeps the soup fresh for months on grocery store shelves. The
cookie tray keeps the cookies from getting crushed. The wrapping around soft drinks
makes it easy to pick up six bottles of cola in one hand. Bagged potatoes mean less
time selecting food. Without a doubt, packaging provides a convenient and sanitary way
to store and transport food and other products.
Nondurable consumer goods: These goods are called nondurable because they are
not meant to last a long time. This category includes many paper products such as
newspapers, magazines, and paper towels. This category also includes clothing and
disposable dinner plates.
Food wastes: This is what you didn’t eat for dinner or the green gunk in the bottom
of your refrigerator.
Activity
Make a list of things that come in packaging and a list of things that have too much
packaging.
1. We bury it in landfills. When we bury trash in a landfill, we can’t recover any of its
potential value (except for methane or landfill gas that is sometimes recovered). It
takes up valuable land to bury trash.
2. We recycle it. We recover its value and conserve natural resources.
3. We burn it in waste-to-energy plants to make electricity. We use the energy in the
trash to generate electricity.
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
Reduce
Buy a larger container instead of two smaller ones. Buy products that do more than
one thing—for example, shampoos that include conditioners.
Look for products with minimal packaging. You will be using fewer
natural resources, and you’ll have less to throw away.
Activity
Assign the Green Living Club team members to make a list of times when small
packages are a good idea. (travelling, lunch boxes, games)
Reuse
Buy reusable products such as rechargeable batteries.
Reuse wrapping paper, gift bags, and bows. Use the Sunday comics for wrapping
birthday presents.
Activity
Assign the selective team members to make an art project using things that would
otherwise be thrown away.
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
Repair
Try to repair before you consider replacement of lawn mowers,
tools, vacuum cleaners, and TVs.
Donate items you can’t repair to local charities, house maids or vocational schools.
Keep appliances in good working order. Properly maintained appliances are less likely to
wear out or break and will not have to be replaced as frequently.
Activities
Make a list of things in the classroom that would be fixed if they broke.
Make a list of things that would be thrown away.
Compost
The waste of all living matter decays in time. You’ve all seen
food in the refrigerator with mold growing on it. That’s
decay. You may have even slipped on the black, slimy leaves in the woods after a long
winter, or picked up a huge stick that crumbled in your hands. That’s decay, too. Decay
is caused by bacteria feeding on dead matter and breaking it down.
Composting speeds up the natural decay of yard wastes and food scraps to make
humus. All you need is the right mixture of waste, water, soil, and air. If the mixture
is right, billions of bacteria will break down the waste in a very short time, usually six
weeks to three months. This fast decay produces a lot of heat—the inside of a good
compost pile can reach 140-160 degrees Fahrenheit.
If the mixture doesn’t have enough air (oxygen), it will rot instead of decay. Different
kinds of bacteria will be at work, ones that don’t need oxygen. They will break down
the waste, but it will take much longer and it might smell bad. Many of the nutrients
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
will be lost and the humus won’t be as good for the soil. A rotting pile doesn’t produce
heat like a compost pile does. Too much (or too little) water can also slow down the
decay. A good compost pile should be damp, but not soggy. Bacteria need water to do
their work, but you don’t want to drown them.
Before you put sticks, bushes, and tree limbs into a compost pile, you must cut them
into small pieces. There are machines called chippers to do this. If the pieces of wood
are too big, they will take longer to decay. Meat, bones, dairy products, and grease
should not be put in a compost pile. They will have a bad smell and attract wild
animals and flies. Other kitchen scraps are good for the pile and will help it decay
faster. The best compost piles have a mixture of food wastes, grass, wood pieces, and
leaves.
Activity
Form a team under your campus Green Living Club to start a campus compost pile. Use
the humus to nourish the school’s flower beds or the vegetable garden.
What is Recycling?
Recycling means to use something again. Newspapers are used to
make new newspapers. Aluminium cans are used to make new aluminium
cans. Glass jars are used to make new glass jars. There are many
reasons why recycling makes sense.
Recycling saves money - Getting rid of trash isn’t free. Garbage trucks must pay
to dump their loads at landfills. Recycling reduces landfill costs because less waste is
buried.
Recycling saves energy. It almost always takes less energy to make a product from
recycled materials than it does to make it from new materials. Recycling aluminium
cans, for example, uses 95 percent less energy than making aluminium cans from new
materials. One exception to the rule is plastics. Sometimes it takes more energy to
recycle plastics than it does to use new materials.
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
Recycling saves natural resources. Natural resources are valuable. Natural resources
include land, plants, minerals, and water. By using materials more than once, we
conserve natural resources. In the case of paper, recycling saves trees, water, and
energy. Preventing one ton of paper waste saves 15-17 mature trees. Recycling that
ton of paper saves 7,000 gallons of water.
Recycling reduces air and water pollution. Using old cans instead of raw materials to
make new aluminium cans reduces air and water pollution by 95 percent.
Activity
Assign the interested members of the team to make a poster or write a song to
remind people to recycle at home and at school.
Recycling Glass
Glass is used to
package many foods:
juices, jellies, baby
food, and more. Glass
makes up about five
percent of all trash
by weight, and five
percent of the space
in a landfill. The best
way to deal with glass
trash is to recycle it.
Plastics
Glass Containers
Yard Waste
Paper
Cardboard
Aluminium Cans
Steel Cans
Tyres
Car Batteries
0 20 40 60 80 100
Recycling glass is a good energy saver. Using recycled glass to make new products uses
less energy than making it from new materials. It saves energy because crushed glass
melts at a lower temperature than the raw materials used to make glass. New glass is
made from sand, soda ash, and limestone.
Old glass is easily made into new glass jars and bottles. Glass jars and bottles can be
recycled over and over again. The glass doesn’t wear out.
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
Preparing glass containers for recycling is easy. All you need to do is remove the lids
or caps and rinse the containers in water. You don’t need to scrub off the labels, since
they will burn up when the glass is melted.
Recyclers sort glass containers by colour—clear, green, and amber (golden brown).
Once glass has been coloured, the colour cannot be removed. That means a maker of
clear glass jars cannot use coloured glass.
You cannot recycle all glass products. Light bulbs, ceramics, mirrors, windows, and
dishes are not made with the same materials as glass jars and bottles. Still, it’s the
containers that we throw away every day, not the light bulbs and dishes that make up
most of our trash.
Activity
An assigned team of Green Living Club to make an exhibit of glass objects that can and
cannot be recycled.
Recycling Paper
What is the number one material in trash? Look around your classroom. What do you
see? Posters? Notebooks?
Cardboard boxes? Textbooks? Bulletin boards decorated with construction paper? You
just imagine, paper is everywhere!
Paper is the number one
material that we throw
away. Of every 100 KG
of trash we throw away,
20 to 25 KG is paper.
Paper and paper
products are 10 to 15%
of all the trash sent to
landfills.
It can be for newspapers or stuffing diapers. Most paper products are made from
trees, though paper can also be made from old cloth or grass.
In most of the developed countries, nearly 80 percent of paper mills are designed to
use paper collected in recycling programs. They depend on paper recycling to supply
the raw materials they need to make new paper. Manufacturing new paper products
from recycled paper uses 40 percent less energy than making paper from new wood
pulp.
Pulp, paper, and wood product mills need a lot of energy to make paper. They generate,
on average, 65 percent of their average needs on site by burning wood scraps they
cannot use to make paper. They buy the rest of the energy they need.
Activity
Make recycled paper. Try different types of paper as the feedstock.
Recycled Paper
Recycled paper is made from waste paper, usually mixed
with new materials. Almost all paper can be recycled
today, but some types are harder to recycle than
others. Papers that have wax, paste, or gum—or papers
that are coated with plastic or aluminium foil—are
usually not recycled because the process is too
expensive.
and cardboard boxes can’t be mixed together for recycling. Today, about 70 percent
of new paper and 90 percent of cardboard boxes are recycled.
Activity
Make an exhibit of paper that can and cannot be recycled.
Recycling Metals
Mostly the metals we recycle are mainly aluminium and steel. Some other metals—like
gold, silver, brass, and copper—are so valuable that we rarely throw them away. They
do not create a trash problem.
In the developing world we use a lot of aluminium and steel. In the developed countries
millions of steel and aluminium cans are used every day. Recycling is the best way to
deal with aluminium and steel waste.
Burning metal trash is not good because metals do not provide any heat energy.
Aluminium melts and steel just gets very hot. Burying is usually not a good idea either.
Aluminium, especially, is so valuable that it does not make sense to bury it.
Recycling Aluminium
Like most
metals,
aluminium is an
ore. An ore is a
mineral that is
mined for a
valuable material
in it. Bauxite, a
reddish clay-like
ore, is rich in
aluminium. To
get the
aluminium out,
though, takes a
huge amount of
energy.
That is why recycling aluminium makes sense. It saves energy—a lot of energy.
Recycling just four aluminium cans saves as much energy as the energy in one cup of
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
gasoline. Companies save energy and money by using recycled aluminium, so they will
pay you for your old cans—about a penny for every can.
After you have put your old aluminium cans in a recycling bin, what happens next?
The old aluminium cans are taken to an aluminium plant. The cans are shredded into
potato chip sized pieces and put into a furnace. The melted aluminium is made into thin
sheets. The sheets are usually made into new aluminium cans. This is called closed-loop
recycling because the old cans are turned into the same thing again. Aluminium cans
are recycled into new cans and put back onto store shelves within 60 days!
Aluminium can be recycled over and over again. It does not lose its quality, and
recycling it saves money, energy, and natural resources every time.
Activity
An assigned team of Green Living Club to make an exhibit of aluminium items
that can be recycled.
Plastics Recycling
We use plastic products
more all the time. We
cover our food in
plastic wrap, drink hot
chocolate in plastic
cups, wear clothes made
from nylon, polyester,
and rayon, and even buy
our plastic things with
plastic credit cards! We
use plastic hundreds of
times every day.
Plastics are energy efficient. It takes less energy to make a plastic ketchup bottle
than a glass ketchup bottle. And since plastics are lightweight, it takes less energy to
ship a truckload of plastic bottles than a truckload of glass bottles.
Disposing of Plastic
Burying plastics is not always the best thing to do. There are other choices—recycling
and burning. Recycling recovers the raw material, which can be used to make new
plastic products. Burning recovers the energy, which can be used to make electricity.
Burying plastics does neither of these things. The value of the plastic is buried
forever.
Recycling Plastics
Energy to Burn
Plastics are made from fossil fuels. These contain as much energy as petroleum or
natural gas. That is much more energy than other types of trash. This makes plastic a
good fuel for waste-to-energy plants. Waste-to-energy plants turn trash into
electricity.
Green Living Association ‘My Green Campus’, Category 2 Guidebook (Grades 4 to 7)
Activities