School Recycling Program

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School Recycling Program Sequencing Recycling at Our School FeedTheBin@co.wake.nc.us 919.856.6006 Grades: 3-5 Materials: Scrambled Recycling (master included), Recycling Sequence (master included), scissors, glue, research material about the life cycle of paper, plastic, & aluminum (included), grading rubric. Activity Time: 20 minutes (lesson), 50 minutes (follow-up) Concepts Taught: Sequencing, Recycling, Life Cycles North Carolina Curriculum Goals: Grade 3: Art 2.03, 2.07, ELA overall goal 1, 2.04 (sequence), 4.02; Grade 4: Art 1.03, ELA 3.06, 4.02, overall goal 5; Grade 5: ELA overall goal 5 Preparation: This lesson should be taught after students have heard the presentation about the Wake County School Recycling Program. Please contact your school recycling coordinator or contact us at FeedTheBin@co.wake.nc.us or 919-856-6006 for more information. Lesson: Review the Feed the Bin presentation with students. Remind them that they will follow a certain procedure to recycle paper at their school. Explain that sequencing is putting something in order. Students may be familiar with sequencing events from the stories they read in class. Ask students to cut the pictures out of how paper is recycled at their school. They should then glue the pictures in order on the sequencing worksheet. Once the pictures are glued in order, students should write what is happening in the process below. Students who finish early may color their sequence. Go over the answers to the sequence. Ask students to read aloud their captions. Independent Follow Up: Students should create their own sequencing worksheet for the life cycle of paper, plastic, or aluminum. The worksheets can be created by groups or individually. The attached life cycles are taken from the NEED books (included in your school s Feed Bucket) entitled Trash Talk, pages 13 and 18. These books should be referenced for additional life cycle information. Students should do research on one of the life cycles using the research materials provided. They can also use the internet if it is available. After researching the life cycle of paper, plastic, or aluminum, students should draw pictures for each stage of the life cycle. Remind students that their life cycle should include detail (you may want to give a minimum # of 8 steps to include for each life cycle). Underneath each picture the students should write a description of what is happening in the step (1 sentence to 1 paragraph). Life cycles can be graded using the attached rubric. Students should present their life cycles to the class & display them around the room.

Extension: Students can complete a creative writing exercise in which they pretend they are a tree being cut down and processed into paper according to the life cycle given. Depending on the grade level, several sentences or a short paragraph can be written.

Name Rubric: Life Cycle of Paper, Plastic, or Aluminum CATEGORY 4 3 2 1 Clarity and Neatness Use of Time Spelling & Grammar Content Required Elements Cooperation Life Cycle is easy to read and all elements are so clearly written, labeled, and drawn that another student could understand the life cycle. Used time well during each class period (as shown by observation by teacher) with no adult reminders. No spelling or grammatical mistakes on a life cycle with lots of text. All content is in the students' own words and is accurate. Life Cycle included all 8 stages as well as a few additional stages. Worked cooperatively with partner all the time with no need for adult intervention. Life Cycle is easy to read and most elements are clearly written, labeled, and drawn. Another person might be able to understand the life cycle after asking one or two questions. Used time well during most class periods (as shown by observation by teacher) with no adult reminders. No spelling or grammatical mistakes on a life cycle with little text. Almost all content is in the students' own words and is accurate. Life Cycle included all 8 stages and one additional stage. Worked cooperatively with partner most of time but had a few problems that the team resolved themselves. Life Cycle is hard to read with rough drawings and labels. It would be hard for another person to understand this life cycle without asking lots of questions. Used time well (as shown by observation by teacher), but required adult reminders on one or more occasions to do so. One spelling or grammatical error on the life cycle. At least half of the content is in the students' own words and is accurate. Life Cycle included all 8 stages. Worked cooperatively with partner most of the time, but had one problem that required adult intervention. Life Cycle is hard to read and one cannot tell what goes where. It would be impossible for another person to understand this life cycle without asking lots of questions. Used time poorly (as shown by observation by teacher) in spite of several adult reminders to do so. Several spelling and/or grammatical errors on the life cycle. Less than half of the content is in the students' own words and/or is accurate. One or more stage was missing from the life cycle. Worked cooperatively with partners some of the time, but had several problems that required adult intervention.

Recycling Sequence Name Place the pictures from the Scrambled Recycling in order of how paper is recycled at your school. Glue them in the correct order below. Write a brief description (at least one complete sentence) underneath each picture.

Scrambled Recycling Pictures Cut out the pictures below. Place them in order of how paper is recycled at your school. Attach them to the Recycling Sequence worksheet. Write a brief description (at least one complete sentence) underneath each picture. Pictures by: Jesse Rademacher, NCDPPEA

Name Answer Key Recycling Sequence Place the pictures from the Scrambled Recycling in order of how paper is recycled at your school. Glue them in the correct order below. Write a brief description (at least one complete sentence) underneath each picture. 1. A student takes out a blank 2. The student writes on the 3. The student places the used piece of notebook paper. piece of notebook paper. paper in the recycling bin. 4. The classroom bin is emptied 5. The roll cart is placed out- 6. A recycling truck comes to into a roll cart. side. pick up the paper in the roll cart. 7. The recycling truck takes the 8. The sorted paper is taken to 9. A recycled piece of notebook paper to the recycling center to the paper mill where new paper is created! be sorted. paper is made.

Please note: material on following pages is from NEED Book Trash Talk, pages 13-18.