Posted by:
Kelly O'Brien
12/5/2009 8:25:50 AM
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Title: |
Paper Recylcling Program |
Grade Level: |
Middle School |
Subject Area: |
Language Arts
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Lesson Time: |
240 minutes for classroom activities |
Introduction: |
This lesson is a
continuation of a lesson titled, “ How to Make Our
School More Green. ” The students went through
the design process and presented their ideas of how to make
the school greener. Of all of the proposals, a paper
recycling program is what they decided was the most
reasonable project for students to take on. With this
lesson, students must design a campaign to get their
message of recycling out to the students and staff.
They will need to create a slogan, symbol, PowerPoint
presentation to present to the school to persuade them to
recycle. Instead of a PowerPoint presentation the students
can create a brochure, highlighting on each section of the
pamphlet what would be on the PowerPoint slides.
However, keeping with the idea of being green, brochures
can be a waste of paper. |
Standards: |
Language Arts
Standard 1. Level III. Uses the general skills and
strategies of the writing process 10.
Writes persuasive compositions (e. g. , engages the reader
by establishing a context, creating a persona, and
otherwise developing reader interest; develops a
controlling idea that conveys a judgment; creates and
organizes a structure appropriate to the needs and
interests of a specific audience; arranges details,
reasons, examples, and/or anecdotes persuasively; excludes
information and arguments that are irrelevant; anticipates
and addresses reader concerns and counter arguments;
supports arguments with detailed evidence, citing sources
of information as appropriate) |
Objectives: |
- Students will:
-
develop a recycling campaign
- design a way to persuade
students and staff members to take on the new recycling
program
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Resources: |
phone number of local waste management company to organize
a regularly scheduled pick-up and containers
computer, with PowerPoint program examples of
brochures that persuade people to buy products or
travel |
Materials: |
-
- many large cardboard boxes (recycled boxes from school
deliveries that will be used as class collection
containers)
- markers
- poster paper
- butcher
paper
- construction paper
- scissors
-
glue
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Vocabulary: |
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- campaign: a connected series of operations designed to
bring about a particular result
- persuade: to move by
argument, entreaty, or expostulation to a belief, position,
or course of action
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Procedures: |
1. REVIEW THE
CHALLENGE - Design a way to educate students and
staff about the students’ paper recycling campaign.
2. INVESTIGATE THE PROBLEM - Students spend one day
surveying classrooms. They need to look in each
classroom for where the teacher can store a container,
where around the school to place large collection
containers, how they will get the recycled paper to the
dumpster, and who will take on the responsibility to follow
up and make sure the program is being implemented around
the school. 3. FRAME/REFRAME THE PROBLEM - Give a
mini-lesson on the 3Rs - Reexamine, Rethink, and
Redefine - Have the students discuss what they think
the problems will be with the implementation. Have
students work in small groups of four to six to discuss
issues found in investigation. Circulate through the
groups to make sure they are still discussing the problems,
not ways to solve issues they see. Help the students
narrow down their problems to what they need to address in
their campaign and what problems they cannot solve. Meet
with each small group in order to focus their thoughts.
They are to chart their ideas and share with the
whole class. 4. GENERATE POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS - Small
groups meet to discuss solutions to the problems they
identified that they must address with the students and
staff. This is a brainstorming session so anything
is a good idea. Ideas can be charted on a group
chart. Give this step a time limit, about twenty
minutes. Then have the students share their ideas and have
the rest of the class help them practice the 3Rs, as they
question and discuss each others’ ideas. 5.
EDIT/DEVELOP IDEAS - Have the students meet again in
their small groups to discuss their group’ s ideas
and the ideas of others in the class. Students then develop
a presentation to share the program with the students and
staff. They need a symbol, a slogan, and FAQs that
are to be included in their presentation. They are
to chart their solution and examples of how their solution
can work. 6. SHARE/EVALUATE THE PROCESS & IDEAS
- Partner groups up so that they can present to each
other their thinking. Have the students question
each other’ s presentations and offer advice
regarding making each group’ s project stronger.
7. FINALIZE THE SOLUTION - Groups are to
finalize their solution by presenting their ideas,
through a PowerPoint presentation, to each
other. They are to plan an oral presentation in which each
member takes a turn to speak to the audience. In
their presentation they should explain their thinking at
each step of the design process and how this helped them
arrive at their solution for the problem. 8. ARTICULATE THE
SOLUTION AND PROCESS - Present to their ideas to each
other. They are to include in their presentations
how and why their solution will be the better way to
encourage people on campus to recycle paper daily.
Based on the many ideas presented the class finally votes
on a symbol, slogan, and plan(s) that should be
implemented. Then the final presentation can be
prepared for the school. |
Assessment: |
To determine if the
student successfully learned the objectives I will assess
each student’ s writing at each stage of the writing
process; brainstorm, draft, revise, edit, publish.
In addition, the images used in the presentation
will be assessed for audience impact and support of the
text. A self-reflection writing sample from each
student will also help to see what the student believes
s/he learned, what s/he believes was successful about their
work on the project, as well as what wasn’ t
successful. |
Enrichment Extension Activities: |
As an extension, students could present to parents at a
parent night, in order to begin recycling at home. Students
can also take their campaign to the other schools in the
area to get the same thing started. |
Teacher Reflection: |
N/A. |
Related Files: |
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