by Deirdre Bailey and Amy Park
Our Grade 4 classes have spent the past three months inquiring into the topic of “Waste and Our World” with the goal of developing an appreciation and understanding of their roles and responsibilities as global citizens of this environmentally fragile and increasingly endangered planet. We had hoped that our inquiry would help students feel empowered to sustain environmentally conscious action as part of their everyday lives.
Our first mission was to collect garbage from the school ground. Students were shocked to discover that we had collected over 4lbs of lunch-related waste in one day and that this amount was repeated by the following class the next day! This activity made it clear that action for the environment was needed and could have a very real effect in our immediate community. As a group, we concluded that one minute public service announcements highlighting a need for change in our daily practices would be the best way to inform our school peers and inspire action.
- creating a decomposition timeline using human waste collected in the immediate area
- discussing the composition of various human waste items and the factors affecting their breakdown
- digitally documenting human waste samples from our school grounds
- completing a retrieval chart with hypotheses on their specimen’s origin and ultimate destination
- explored the Weaselhead Natural Area digitally documenting natural waste samples
- completed a retrieval chart with hypotheses on their origin and ultimate destination
- connected with two expert speakers, one from the Centre for Affordable Water and Sanitation Technology, and Pat Allen, from Worms@Work
CATEGORIES
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Lots to improve, keep working/trying.
(Kindergarten-ish)
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You’re okay but…
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Good job, met expectations
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Excellent!
THIS IS YOUR TARGET!!!
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Content
Research
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Boring and meaningless facts! Used only a single source. Copied!
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Partially researched, lacking information, “is that it?” incomplete
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Well researched, descriptive, relevant.
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Interesting and helpful facts! Engaging! Has obviously used multiple sources. Original and in own words.
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Content
Script
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Uses “tired” words. Lacks description. Information is unclear. Off topic and confusing. Unconvincing. Audience is bored…
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Unconvincing, “I’m confused”
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Sufficient, concise, competent, clear message.
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Uses juicy words. Descriptive. Is clear on the facts. On topic and makes sense. Persuasive. Exciting – captivates the audience’s attention.
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Images
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Inappropriate, fuzzy, irrelevant, unrealistic, doesn’t go with the subject/script/topic
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Unpleasant, may not be appropriate to message
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Appropriate, pleasing, satisfying
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Realistic! Relevant! Memorable! Detailed! Appropriate! Clear! Interesting!
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Voice
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Lacks expression, boring, mumbly, too quiet or too loud, “notalkinglikethis” and “no…. talking…. like…. this…..”
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A little mumbly, a hard time following, needs practice
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< div style="font:normal normal normal 8px/normal Helvetica;text-align:left;margin:0;">Clear, nice, good expression. |
Lots of expression, enthusiastic, good volume, enunciated well, speaks at a great pace
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Groupwork
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Making one person do all the work, “me first”, arguing, fighting, using only one person’s idea, nobody is cooperating, bossing, all talking at once, “my idea is better”, not sharing
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Inefficient, needs help and support, argumentative
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Nice to people, shares, demonstrates positive body language
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Cooperative, inclusive, everybody has a voice, communicative, compromising, taking turns, incorporating everyone’s ideas, on task, “you first” mentality
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Here’s an overview of the process:
Student Exemplar 1: Nature Killers!
Awesome movie and critical thinking!
Awesome movie and critical thinking!
Amy and Deirdre,
What a great activity for promoting an awareness of the impact of natural and human waste and the role of students as environmental, global citizens! You demonstrate the importance of building a foundation of understanding and knowledge before exploring the impact of human and natural waste in and around the school setting and in the students' daily lives. The rubric which you developed with your students clearly outlines expectations for the learning activities. The video clips providing an overview of the process and the student exemplars are powerful! I appreciate how you openly share and celebrate this learning experience and invite others to provide feedback and become involved. Garry McKinnon
Amy and Deirdre,
What a great activity for promoting an awareness of the impact of natural and human waste and the role of students as environmental, global citizens! You demonstrate the importance of building a foundation of understanding and knowledge before exploring the impact of human and natural waste in and around the school setting and in the students' daily lives. The rubric which you developed with your students clearly outlines expectations for the learning activities. The video clips providing an overview of the process and the student exemplars are powerful! I appreciate how you openly share and celebrate this learning experience and invite others to provide feedback and become involved. Garry McKinnon