* * * * * * * SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE! * * * * * * *
DON'T RECYCLE YOUR CURRICULUM
Are you tired of recycling the same old environmental lessons? Looking for something new on the subject? The Environmental Protection Agency might have just the thing for you -- a complete program on recycling and solid waste management for students in grades K-12. Recycle Today! includes four components focusing on the effects of trash and recycling on the environment. They include:
- Let's Reduce and Recycle: Curriculum for Solid Waste Awareness. "Why teach trash?" That's the question asked -- and answered -- in this comprehensive curriculum guide filled with understandable instruction and hands-on activities. The two-part guide provides separate instruction and activities for students in grades K-6 and grades 9-12. Each part contains 5 grade-level-appropriate units -- What Is Waste?, Where Does Waste Go?, How Does Waste Affect Our Resources?, How Can We Produce Less Waste?, and What Can We Do About Waste? Each unit includes several lesson plans that combine teacher instruction and student activities, and each lesson plan provides clearly marked objectives, vocabulary words, and procedures for teaching about recycling. The lessons span both the subject and the curriculum. Younger students can learn about recycling symbols, create litter raps, build a mini landfill, and explore how substances burn. Older students explore non-toxic substitutes for common household products, start a compost pile, and research and report on the life cycle of a variety of waste products. The guide also includes a glossary, lists of resources, a worksheet students can use to create a profile of their own community, and a performable skit about the history of recycling and waste management. And it's all free!
- School Recycling Programs: A Handbook for Teachers. As you proceed through the curriculum guide, help students apply their classroom solutions to real-life problems with this clearly written and well-organized brochure. Learn how to set up and run four different types of recycling programs, including a one-time recycling drive, an ongoing school recycling effort, a community collection center, and a cooperative program with a local recycling center. The Ten Tips to Get Started will help you develop your plan, and additional suggestions are provided on what materials to recycle, how to collect and store materials, ways to identify markets and establish municipal contacts, and where to find start-up funds and other support. The handbook spotlights schools with successful recycling programs and tells how your students can qualify for the President's Environmental Youth Awards.

- Adventures of the Garbage Gremlin. The Garbage Gremlin is looking for a home. But he won't find it at this school! In this funny and informative comic book, students in grades 4-7 learn about the importance of recycling, as they vow to forsake a "life of grime."
- Ride the Wave of the Future: Recycle Today! This colorful poster, a joint effort of the EPA and the National Science Teachers Association, encourages students to stamp out the Garbage Gremlin.
In addition, The EPA's Environmental Education Center provides a number of resources for students and teachers, including background information, curriculum resources, student activities, and announcements of programs, projects, and awards.
To order the publications, visit the EPA's Web site or contact the EPA's National Center for Environmental Publications and Information at U.S. EPA/NCEPI, P.O. Box 42419, Cincinnati, Ohio 45242-2419. Publications can be ordered by phone at 1-800/490-9198, by fax at 513/489-8695, or by email at ncepi.mail@epamail.epa.gov. Be sure to include the following product codes:
- Curriculum--EPA/530-SW-90-005;
- Teacher Handbook--EPA/SW-90-023;
- Comic Book--EPA/530-SW-90-024;
- Poster--EPA/530-SW-90-010.
GROWING THINGS
The Wonders of Aloe, a booklet published by the National Gardening Association, though the smallest of our featured freebies, is packed full of ideas that will give new life to your science curriculum. This tiny teacher's guide does, of course, tell you how to grow aloe, "a plant that thrives on neglect," but it doesn't stop there. Cross-curricular activities galore grow from the fertile minds of its authors. Various articles invite students to imagine life in Africa 4000 years ago, learn about the parts of an aloe plant, and read about the healing powers of plants.
Suggested activities include mapmaking, classifying substances, and researching folklore. Younger students can experiment with the best conditions for growing aloe, while older students compare the pH of aloe in the morning and at night. Other activities will help your students answer questions such as Does aloe really help heal burns? Can aloe inhibit the growth of bacteria? and What's a stomata? Read a label! Study a timeline! Write a commercial! Run a fundraiser! It's all there -- in 12 short pages!
To order The Wonders of Aloe teachers' guide, call 1-800-538-7476. Also, be sure to explore NG Online's Kids and Classrooms to find additional activities and to learn how your students can participate in the organization's 16th Annual Youth Garden Grants.
ADDITIONAL FREE RESOURCES
The following resources, though less extensive, will also prove helpful for teaching a variety of topics.
- The 1998-99 season of the PBS television program Scientific American Frontiers is already underway. For a list of the rest of this year's shows and information on obtaining their free teaching guides, visit In the Classroom. The teaching guides contain suggestions for hands-on activities, as well as teaching tips and resources, and a reproducible quiz. Guides can also be ordered by calling 1-800-315-5010.
- ZOOM This new PBS show for kids will premier in January. To obtain a free resource guide containing math and science activities featured on the show, call 617-492-2777 ext. 3848, email WGBH_Materials_Request@wgbh.org, or write ZOOMsci Guide, WGBH Educational Print & Outreach, 125 Western Ave. Boston, MA 02134.
- Blockbuster Video Blockbuster offers free rentals of community service videos on topics such as nutrition, AIDS, and fire safety. Stop in at your local Blockbuster store.
SHAREWARE RESOURCES
Shareware is a way of marketing software in which software can be downloaded and used for a limited time without any cost or obligation. Payment is required only if the user wishes to continue using the software beyond the evaluation period. To find sources of educational shareware, visit one of these sites:
- Teaching Aids - IBM Software Provides Back to Math Shareware and Freeware from the U.S. Department of Education.
- Boomeria Shareware for Teachers Includes a gradebook, as well as programs for making seating charts, rosters, drilling students, and playing a chemistry game.
- Educational Shareware and Freeware Includes shareware on molecular modeling, astronomy, typing, crossword puzzles, money, and more.
- (Educational Software Cooperative) A non-profit corporation consisting of developers, publishers, distributors, and users of educational software. Click Visit Home Pages, Download Software to find links to free software.
Article by Linda Starr
Education World®
Copyright © 1998 Education World
12/14/1998