Question:
How can I make my school greener?
ruthie
2007-05-12 08:41:19 UTC
I am 15 yrs old and running for Head Girl at my north-London comprehensive girl's school. As a student body, we do alot of work for the community, and the environment has been one of our main focuses in the past year. We currently recycle our plastic cups and have recycling bins in every classroom for paper. Any ideas for further ways to reduce our waste that I could use in my campaign?
Ten answers:
hoabantrang61188
2007-05-12 09:54:44 UTC
It's fantastic that you are doing what you do! Keep up your brilliant work!



Ask if your school has a responsible teacher who will look into joining your local Freecycle group on your behalf, you can put stuff on there that you no longer use and let someone else use it instead.

When your school is getting rid of books, paper, chairs, desks, etc you can pass them on to someone in your own community who can use them further, this stops them going into the landfill sites so helps the environment!

You can also ask for stuff you need too, ask for some compost bins then maybe you could get the kitchen staff to compost the left over food waste instead of lobbing it in the main rubbish.. You never know! ( Although that could be a long shot! :-D )
?
2007-05-12 15:51:21 UTC
Paper Recycling



* Paper is the main form of waste created by schools, making up at least a quarter of all its rubbish.

* Contact your local council and ask them to provide your school with a paper-recycling bin.

* Set up a paper collection scheme for each classroom by making ‘paper only’ boxes for the children and teachers to put used paper in. Make sure they are clearly labelled and placed in an obvious place.

* Involve pupils by allowing them to create posters and bright labels for the recycle bins.

* Brief the teachers about the recycling scheme and hold assemblies to inform the pupils.

* Make sure that the teachers and staff understand the importance of recycling, and this should filter down to the pupils.



Metal Recycling



* Metal recycling schemes are good for schools with vending machines.

* Contact your local council and ask them to provide your school with a recycling bin for cans.

* Place the bins next to the vending machines and make sure they are clearly labelled.

* Make sure that both teachers and pupils understand on the importance of recycling.

* Find out if there is a ‘cash for cans’ program running in your area.

* Buy recycled print cartridges whenever possible.



Composting Scheme



* Contact your local council who may be able to provide a compost bin for your school, in some cases, compost bins are provided free of charge. Your councils recycling officer will be able to advise you further.

* Teachers and children can be involved in making the compost by adding items such as tea bags, coffee granules, fruit and vegetable cuttings from the cafeteria.

* If your school has a garden, then you can add leaves, plant cuttings and grass trimmings to the compost heap.
SikSonic
2007-05-12 15:52:24 UTC
The big problem that schools in my area, Leistershire, is the waste of paper. There's so much that is not recycled. That would be a great thing, and turning lights off when not needed.
~*tigger*~ **
2007-05-12 15:51:43 UTC
Bin for pencils and pens that you find on the floor

that can be resold and money sent to Green peace

Sponsored events in the summer

fetes in the summer money raised going to green peace or WWF

paper can be reused on the other side

so poster paper and drawings that people don't want



glass can be reused

as well as aluminium cans

dinner hall monitors can collect cans and recylce



good luck :O)



and well done
treehugger
2007-05-12 18:29:44 UTC
ask to get more vegetarian options on the menu.



Would you ever open your refrigerator, pull out 16 plates of pasta and toss them in the trash, and then eat just one plate of food? How about leveling 55 square feet of rain forest for a single meal or dumping 2,500 gallons of water down the drain? Of course you wouldn't. But if you're eating chicken, fish, turkey, pork, or beef, that's what you're doing—wasting resources and destroying our environment.



Animals raised for food expend the vast majority of the calories that they are fed simply existing, just as we do. We feed more than 70 percent of the grains and cereals we grow to farmed animals, and almost all of those calories go into simply keeping the animals alive, not making them grow. Only a small fraction of the calories consumed by farmed animals are actually converted into the meat that people eat.



A major 2006 report by the United Nations summarized the devastation caused by the meat industry. Raising animals for food, the report said, is “one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global. The findings of this report suggest that it should be a major policy focus when dealing with problems of land degradation, climate change and air pollution, water shortage and water pollution and loss of biodiversity. Livestock’s contribution to environmental problems is on a massive scale ….”



Growing all the crops to feed farmed animals requires massive amounts of water and land—in fact, nearly half of the water and 80 percent of the agricultural land in the United States are used to raise animals for food. Our taste for meat is also taking a toll on our supply of fuel and other nonrenewable resources—about one-third of the raw materials used in America each year is consumed by the farmed animal industry.



Farmed animals produce about 130 times as much excrement as the entire human population of the United States, and since factory farms don't have sewage treatment systems as our cities and towns do, this concentrated slop ends up polluting our water, destroying our topsoil, and contaminating our air. And meat-eaters are responsible for the production of 100 percent of this waste—about 86,000 pounds per second! Give up animal products, and you'll be responsible for none of it.



Many leading environmental organizations, including the National Audubon Society, the WorldWatch Institute, the Sierra Club, and the Union of Concerned Scientists, have recognized that raising animals for food damages the environment more than just about anything else that we do. Whether it's the overuse of resources, unchecked water or air pollution, or soil erosion, raising animals for food is wreaking havoc on the Earth. The most important step you can take to save the planet is to go vegetarian.
Cutie Pie
2007-05-12 15:56:11 UTC
if there is a empty space around the school try planting gardens, trees, flowers, maybe the school's own vegetable garden! you have to start somewhere and start small and watch snowball into something great
2007-05-12 15:59:17 UTC
Take your History teachers moth eaten courderoy jacket and putit on the compost heap. set it alight.
Ste B
2007-05-12 15:49:09 UTC
check to see if your school canteen recycles, it probably does not and they produce lots of waste other than food.
shuzu_tanmay
2007-05-12 16:14:10 UTC
Grow more trees and cut less trees.
ben d
2007-05-13 00:06:55 UTC
talk to your principal.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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