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BOULDER/BROOMFIELD
COUNTY SCHOOL RECYCLING and ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION PROGRAM
Since 1987, Eco-Cycle, Inc. has coordinated the
Boulder/Broomfield County School Recycling and Environmental Education Program, currently funded by Boulder County, Boulder Valley School District, Broomfield County, the City of Boulder, the Town of Superior,
Eco-Cycle, and various grant sources. The program provides for the
collection of recyclables from all 53,000 students and staff in
80 Boulder Valley and St. Vrain Valley public schools (two districts). It also provides
monthly feedback to individual schools on program progress. Our
educational presentations are given to over 36,000 kindergarten
through 12th grade students in approximately 1,300 Boulder and Broomfield County classrooms annually.
This unique environmental education effort received the Outstanding School Program Award from the National Recycling Coalition in 1996, the Outstanding Local Program Award from the North American Association of Environmental Education in 1998, the 2007 Our World Award from the Boulder Rotary/Center for ReSource Conservation/Roche Colorado Corporation, the 2007 NOVA Environment Award, the 2007 EPA Region 8 Environmental Achievement Award and the 2008 Best New Program Award from the Colorado Alliance For Environmental Education.
It is the interworking of the three facets (collection,
education and feedback) that makes the program both unique and effective.
The actual collection of recyclables from classrooms allows students
to put the knowledge and concern they have gained from the education
component into positive action. The education component provides
the information and motivation needed for students to follow through
on recycling, waste reduction and conservation activities. Regular feedback
to the schools keeps recycling in the forefront and makes it a more
integral part of daily school life. All three aspects are key to
the program's overwhelming success, making it a national model for
others wanting to start similar projects.
COLLECTION OF RECYCLABLES:
Over 800 tons of office/classroom paper, cardboard, magazines, newspaper,
aluminum, steel, plastic and glass are now recycled from the schools
annually. This compares to 14.7 tons recycled in 1988 - a 5700%
increase. As the collections have expanded, many schools have been
able to cut their trash service by one third, providing substantial savings to both districts.
FEEDBACK TO THE SCHOOLS:
Each school has a recycling contact who receives monthly
feedback on both the quantity and quality of materials recycled.
The number of trees "saved" by their paper recycling is
posted on their tree banner, an impressive 3.5 x 7 foot "trees
saved" thermometer. In addition, a few schools each year receive
special recognition and prizes for doing an exceptional job with
their program. The school recycling contacts are rewarded with luncheons
and seminars on environmental issues to show appreciation for their
work.
CLASSROOM EDUCATION:
Using age-specific group discussions, activities, field trips, slide
shows, crafts and games, our educational presentations help students understand
the relationship between solid waste issues and many other environmental
problems such as pollution, resource depletion and deforestation.
The presentations are very popular, with the number given increasing
from 180 in 1989 to approximately 1,800 annually. Most presentations educate
students about source reduction and buying recycled products as
well as recycling. Other topics include holiday and lunch
time waste reduction, litter prevention, composting, household hazardous waste, forest ecology, rainforest
issues, air quality, indoor air pollution, and energy conservation.
SPECIAL PROJECTS:
To keep teachers excited about including us in their curriculum,
we develop innovative, special projects each year. Some examples
include: the Kids Conference for the Earth, an all day event that
brought 170 children and parents together to participate in environmental
workshops; the Rainforest and Recycling Fundraiser, where 6,000
students in 12 schools learned about the benefits of recycling to
the rainforest and saved aluminum cans to raise money to adopt acres
of rainforest; America's Forest, Our Own Backyard, in which over
500 students in 18 classes learned about forestry and waste reduction
before planting trees; the Paperboard Collection Contest, where
students at 22 schools collected paperboard to be mixed with yard
waste for an experimental composting project; the Green Star Kids
Project, which motivated students at 51 schools to buy recycled
products at back-to-school time; the Waste Wise Conference,
held at the University of Colorado to educate secondary students on a variety of environmental
issues; the Waste-Free Lunch Contest, in which six schools competed to make the least lunch-time trash; the Locker Leftovers project in which students reduce waste at the end of the school year by recycling and donating to charity; and the Sneakers for Schools Contest, where 22 schools collected worn-out athletic shoes for recycling.
OUTREACH BEYOND BOULDER
COUNTY: For two decades, we have been reaching
out beyond the borders of Boulder County to help others establish
school recycling in their communities. Over 300 teachers have now
been trained in our curriculum. During 1991-1993, we received EPA
funding to develop and conduct all-day teacher trainings on solid
waste issues. These were presented in collaboration with the University
of Colorado. Two hundred and twenty teams of students and teachers
traveled to 11 different sites in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming to
attend. In 1995 we created "Waste Not, Want Not," the
first four-day teacher training institute on solid waste. EPA funds
provided travel stipends for teachers from around the state to participate.
In addition, we have worked with the City of Denver and the Eastern
Colorado Rural Development Council to train teachers in those communities.
In 1993, we developed "Reduce,
Reuse, Recycle: A Waste Reduction Activity Kit." This 18
gallon trunk is full of games, slide shows, experiments and all
the visual aids necessary for an educator to teach a one week unit
on solid waste. In 1994, we were honored to receive a grant from
the Colorado Governor's Office of Energy Conservation to place these
kits in every school district in the state.
There are currently over 1,000 kits being used by organizations and
individuals in at least 34 states and five Canadian provinces.
GREEN STAR SCHOOLS: In the spring of 2005, we launched the Green Star Schools project. As part of this project, Boulder County and Broomfield County schools are the first in the nation to move towards Zero Waste by addressing every aspect of each school’s waste stream. Large scale composting of food waste and non-recyclable paper from the kitchen, cafeteria, classrooms, offices and bathrooms (paper towels) has cut participating schools’ trash by one third. Another third is diverted by the recycling program. A Waste-Free Lunch campaign and other waste reduction projects focus on the remaining third that is not recyclable or compostable. Currently, 17 schools are part of the program and more will be added each year.
Updated January 2008
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