Recycling… a hands-on experience

Students at most ages have heard the word recycling, but when asked what it actually means we get a short narrative of “making new stuff”. In the schools that WeFutureCycle is active in, the kids have learned that packaging items made of cartons, hard plastic, aluminum, glass and milk cartons are fully recyclable and thus they go into the recycling bin. They are good at sorting, do it easily and while chatting with their friends. The result is a reduction of 95!!! % in waste by sorting all compostables and all recyclables out of the system.

But what does “making new stuff” actually mean? We put it to the test by giving them a bunch of materials and let them build a space station with it . While they were busy cutting “solar panels” from cereal boxes, I explained that most materials can do just that. Be made into something as fantastic as a space station.

Turning waste into energy

Wefuturecycle offers a vast variety of environmental education classes to connect students to their environment. One of these lessons starts with the simple question: “Is there any value in animal and human manure?” This question usually invokes grimaces and grossed out “eeeeekkkkss” from the students.

When I asked them what they thought about cooking with their human waste, we had a few minutes of groans and disbelief. But they listened carefully when I explained how people can cook with the help of manure and it opened their thoughts to think way past their own experiences

We explore together what it takes for civilization to function. For most students it is the first thought to what happens after they flush in the bathroom. And most students in the metro area have no understanding of what life might look like without the convenience of city water and engineered sewer systems.

Walking them through the process of anaerobic digestion and the benefit of producing Methane from waste products , contrasting it with fossil fuel Methane opened their eyes to the environment around them and how we have many solutions to our pressing problems but are lacking will to implement them.

Teaching a generation of kids to be the new fearless leaders of tomorrow is very heartwarming.