Green Projects for Students
The ultimate goal of making schools eco-friendly is to get the children involved in projects that help build a greener community. If the school uses renewable energy, recycles, and composts food waste, it demonstrates green living in action to children, parents, and people in the wider community.
A range of projects is the ideal so that everyone in the school — from the youngest and most academically minded to the oldest and most practically minded — can be engaged and involved. Some ideas include:
Dig a vegetable plot: Devote spare land on school grounds to a vegetable plot. Students can grow organic vegetables to use in the school cafeteria or to donate to local food banks. In the process of planting, monitoring, and caring for an organic garden, students learn about organic production, local and seasonal food, and the link between the land and what ends up on their plates.
If funding is an issue, seek sponsorship from the local community. Garden centers may be interested in providing tools, seeds, and expert advice, for example, or community organizations may provide funds to buy fencing to protect the garden from rabbits and other wildlife eager to sample the produce.
Visit the local landfill site and recycling facility: Taking children to a landfill to see the reality of waste management can have a big impact on their habits. Incorporate the following activities in the landfill visit to get children involved and thinking about waste management:
![Seeing where trash ends up can serve as a wake-up call to children. [Credit: PhotoDisc/Getty Images]](http://media.wiley.com/Lux/04/92004.image0.jpg)
Credit: PhotoDisc/Getty Images
Seeing where trash ends up can serve as a wake-up call to children.
Ask them to identify things that could have been reused, repaired, or recycled.
Explain how long it takes various items they see to decompose.
Explain how toxic chemicals have to be prevented from getting into the ground and local water supplies.
Discuss the various other options for getting rid of and reducing the waste to a minimum in the first place.
From the landfill site, go to a local recycling facility if you can, and show the children what happens to the items sorted and processed there.
Plant trees: If the school has no land of its own on which to grow trees, find a local park or playground open to the project. Don’t forget that part of the project is monitoring the growth and health of the trees, so choose a fast-growing species suitable for your environment.
Launch a green competition: Friendly competitions give children incentives to work, and green projects are an ideal opportunity to provide a little extra incentive for extra effort. The competition may be to find the students who come up with the best green project of the year or who write the best essays on a specific green issue, for example. Every aspect of the competition — including letting the kids and their parents know about it — should help to raise awareness about green living and green schools.
Prizes can come from you if you can afford them, or you may ask local green companies to donate either goods or funds for the prizes. It’s best if the prizes contribute to green living, too.

Green Living Glossary
acid rain
A mild acidic solution that falls in rain or as dry particles caused when fossil fuel burning produces sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides. Acid rain has been linked to damaging effects on waterways and forests.

Green Living Glossary
active solar design
A strategy for designing high-performance, ultra-energy-efficient buildings. Active solar incorporates all the elements of a passive solar design with additional mechanical equipment, such as pumps or fans, to take advantage of the heat from the sun.

Green Living Glossary
alternative energy sources
Wind, hydro (water), biomass (fuel from natural material such as crops and agricultural waste), and solar power.

Green Living Glossary
biodegradable
Made from materials that will decay and break down into naturally occurring elements in a fairly short amount of time.

Green Living Glossary
biomass
Fuel made from natural material such as crops and agricultural waste.

Green Living Glossary
Bokashi
A Japanese term referring to a process of fermenting organic matter

Green Living Glossary
carbon emissions
Carbon released when many substances — particularly fossil fuels such as oil, gas, and coal — are burned by vehicles and planes; by the manufacturing processes of many consumer goods; and by the heating, cooling, and electricity for your home.

Green Living Glossary
carbon neutral
The state of reducing a person’s carbon emissions as much as possible and balancing the remaining carbon emissions by offsetting them with processes that consume carbon.

Green Living Glossary
carbon offsets; carbon credits
Paying for or participating in programs that reduce the carbon in the atmosphere. Purchased shares go toward reducing the same amount of environmental costs that an activity expends. Carbon offset programs or projects often involve tree planting because trees have a huge capacity to absorb carbon from the atmosphere. Other programs involve everything from supporting solar and wind power to replacing fossil fuel–burning stoves in developing countries with more sustainable energy sources.

Green Living Glossary
carcinogen
A cancer-causing substance.

Green Living Glossary
carpooling
Reducing the number of vehicles going to the same destination by having two or more people ride in the same vehicle. In most cases, carpoolers take turns being the driver and using their own vehicles.

Green Living Glossary
car-sharing
A system in which a person pays a fee that gives them access to a vehicle (or a pool of vehicles), usually parked in an easily accessible location. Car-sharing can eliminate the need for a personal vehicle.

Green Living Glossary
climate change; global warming
Changes in the concentrations of various gases in the atmosphere that are affecting the planet’s climate. Many scientists believe that the increase of carbon dioxide is a primary contributor to global warming, which occurs when gases trap warmth in the earth’s atmosphere instead of letting the atmosphere release it.

Green Living Glossary
compact fluorescent CFL bulbs
Fluorescent light bulbs that fit into a standard light bulb socket and use a fraction of the energy of their incandescent counterparts.

Green Living Glossary
compost
Decayed plants and other organic matter that breaks down into rich soil.

Green Living Glossary
core aerating
Poking small holes in the top few inches of lawn to encourage the flow of air, water, and nutrients.

Green Living Glossary
corporate social responsibility
Principles adopted by a business to make sure that its operations harm no one and instead benefit everyone around it and involved in it.

Green Living Glossary
daylighting
Bringing natural light into a home.

Green Living Glossary
ecosystem
A community of living organisms and nonliving materials.

Green Living Glossary
ecotourism
Sustainable and ethical travel in a natural environment.

Green Living Glossary
Energy Star
The federal government system for rating energy efficiency in appliances.

Green Living Glossary
Environmental Protection Agency EPA
Federal agency that regulates environmental laws.

Green Living Glossary
Fairtrade
System to ensure that workers and producers receive fair value for their products and that mandates sustainable practices in producing those products.

Green Living Glossary
food miles
The distance food travels from where it’s produced to the consumer.

Green Living Glossary
foodprint
The amount of land that various diets require to sustain them.

Green Living Glossary
fossil fuels
The energy-rich organic substances, traced back to the remains of organisms that lived 300 to 400 million years ago, that modern societies burn to provide power.

Green Living Glossary
geothermal
Energy within the Earth in the form of heat.

Green Living Glossary
greenhouse effect
The warming of the planet caused by gases in the atmosphere trapping the sun’s heat instead of letting it get through to space. This action is very similar to what happens in a greenhouse.

Green Living Glossary
greenhouse gases
Gases such as carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide produced by the burning and processing of fossil fuels and that contribute to global warming and acid rain.

Green Living Glossary
greywater
Water already used for washing, laundry, or showering that is appropriate for household functions from toilet flushing to watering plants.

Green Living Glossary
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design LEED
A scoring system to rate how ecologically friendly buildings are.

Green Living Glossary
light shelves
White or light-colored horizontal fins above windows that bounce sunlight up onto the ceiling to bring it deeper into the room.

Green Living Glossary
light-emitting diode LED
A tiny semiconductor that emits light.

Green Living Glossary
natural gas
An energy source that burns cleaner than coal and oil but still releases carbon dioxide when it burns and methane during production, storage, and transportation.

Green Living Glossary
organic
Of living things; in food, grown without chemical fertilizers or pesticides or genetically modified organisms.

Green Living Glossary
passive solar design
Building design that takes advantage of the fact that the summer sun is higher than the winter sun. Overhangs shade the building from the summer sun and allow the lower winter sun to enter the building and heat it.

Green Living Glossary
petrochemicals
Chemicals derived from petroleum.

Green Living Glossary
phantom load; standby power
Energy drawn by a plugged-in appliance even when the appliance is turned off.

Green Living Glossary
plastic identification code
A triangle with a number from 1 to 7 inside indicating what type of plastic an item is made from.

Green Living Glossary
PV cell
A photovoltaic cell; a cell with a thin semiconductor that converts solar power into electricity.

Green Living Glossary
recycling
Collecting goods that have reached the end of their lives and processing them, their parts, or some of their parts, into the raw materials from which new goods are made.

Green Living Glossary
renewable energy
Energy from sources that cannot be used up, such as wind, water, and the sun.

Green Living Glossary
skylight
A rooftop window that brings in twice the light of a traditional window of the same size.

Green Living Glossary
solar panel
A panel containing cells that convert sunlight into electricity.

Green Living Glossary
sun tunnel
A passage that brings light into a room by bouncing sunlight through a small dome skylight on the roof connected to another skylight on the ceiling of the room. (Also known as a sun tube, sun pipe, and solar tube.)

Green Living Glossary
sustainable
Using natural resources in a way that allows for continued viability.

Green Living Glossary
thermal hole
An opening such as a window that leaks heat and air-conditioning energy.

Green Living Glossary
thermal mass
The ability of a material to absorb and store temperature.

Green Living Glossary
three Rs
The environmental practices of reducing consumption, reusing items, and recycling.

Green Living Glossary
top-dressing
Applying a light scattering of compost, other mulch, or sometimes fertilizer, over soil surfaces to add organic matter or nutrients without digging it in

Green Living Glossary
toxic waste
Disposed materials that can cause harm to people, animals, or the environment.

Green Living Glossary
vermicomposting
Composting with worms.

Green Living Glossary
xeriscaping
Landscaping for water conservation; a practice of garden planning and maintenance.