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Developing a Middle School “Green Technology” Course. C.J. Shields Greencastle Middle School Purdue University. Presentation. Passing around an email list Will email presentation to those interested Flash Drive When the session is finished I will copy if you have one. Thank You.
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Developing a Middle School “Green Technology” Course C.J. Shields Greencastle Middle School Purdue University
Presentation • Passing around an email list • Will email presentation to those interested • Flash Drive • When the session is finished I will copy if you have one
Thank You • To ITEEA for the opportunity to present • To GMS for allowing me to extend my spring break to come to ITEEA • To Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools and Shamrock Garden Elementary for the projector
Introduction background information
Introduction • C.J. Shields • Greencastle Middle School • Greencastle, IN • 4th year at G.M.S. • Teach • GTT 6 periods a day • 8th Grade – 1st Semester • 7th Grade - 2nd Semester • Green Technology 1 period a day
Introduction • Goals • Introduction • Show the foundation for including green concepts in the Middle School TE curriculum • Provide examples of class curricula • Provide examples of class projects • Provide a list of resources for those interested • Summarize student goals for the course • Create a contact list to dispense information
School Overview • At G.M.S. • All teachers teach core subject periods 1-6 • Periods 7&8 • Study halls • Remediation • Band & choir • Supplemental 9 week classes • Green Technology • Community Projects • Multi-Cultural Topics
Green Technology Curriculum Foundation
ITEEA Standard Foundation • Standard 1: Students will develop an understanding of the characteristics and scope of technology. • Standard 2: Students will develop an understanding of the core concepts of technology. • Standard 3: Students will develop an understanding of the relationships among technologies and the connections between technology and other fields of study.
ITEEA Standard Foundation • Standard 4: Students will develop an understanding of the cultural, social, economic, and political effects of technology. • Standard 5: Students will develop an understanding of the effects of technology on the environment. • Standard 6: Students will develop an understanding of the role of society in the development and use of technology.
ITEEA Standard Foundation • Standard 8: Students will develop an understanding of the attributes of design. • Standard 9: Students will develop an understanding of engineering design. • Standard 10: Students will develop an understanding of the role of troubleshooting, research and development, invention and innovation, and experimentation in problem solving.
ITEEA Standard Foundation • Standard 12: Students will develop abilities to use and maintain technological products and systems. • Standard 13: Students will develop abilities to assess the impact of products and systems. • Standard 16: Students will develop an understanding of and be able to select and use energy and power technologies.
State Standards • Green concepts relate to many standards • Over 10 Indiana ETEI standards • Presumably similar in other states
Course Overview Green technology
Course Overview • Topics Covered • Recycling • Energy • Green designed buildings • Green enterprise • Other Activities • Running the school’s recycling program • Running the school’s energy challenge
Course Overview • Each day begins with a “Green Living Tip” • Very quick discussion • <= 5 minutes • Something to think about • Helps see the relevance
Green Living Tip Example #1 • The average school in the United States throws away 8 million sheets of paper a year! • That is • 38 tons of paper going into landfills • 136 trees thrown away every year! • The Green Book. 2007. Three Rivers Press New York, NY
Green Living Tip Example #2 • Opening and closing the refrigerator door to look for something costs $30 - $60 per year! • The Green Book. 2007. Three Rivers Press New York, NY
Green Living Tip Example #3 • Turn off the water when you brush your teeth. You may waste up to 5 gallons each time you brush! • If everyone did this, the U.S. would save 1,500,000,000 gallons of water a day! • The Green Book. 2007. Three Rivers Press New York, NY
Major Topic #1 Recycling
Recycling • Curriculum Resource • Comes from NEED • National Energy Education Development • Concept is kids teaching kids • Attended a workshop in Denver in 2006 • Discovered via a listserv • Regular conferences throughout the country • Remain updated in conjunction with science department
Recycling • Curriculum Topics Covered • Introduction to Solid Waste • Source Reduction • Introduction to Recycling • Recycling Plastics • Recycling Metals • Recycling Paper & Glass • Waste to Energy • Landfilling
Recycling • For each topic students: • Read a 4 page NEED handout • Highlight key areas • Great for school improvement data! • Answer 5 questions • Create an Open Office Impress Presentation • Limited to 15 words per slide [7 slides]
Recycling • Students present to class • As class presents • The rest of class completes graphic organizer • Good for school improvement • Process takes 5 class periods
Major Topic #2 Energy
Energy • Curriculum Resources • Information also comes from NEED • Also from GTT • Science of Technology Activity 2.1 • Energy Sources Display Project • Goals (Taken from GTT Activity 2.1): • Describe • The historical development of the energy source • Whether it is renewable or nonrenewable • The impact its usage has on the environment
Energy • Renewable Sources • Hydro • Geothermal • Biomass • Solar • Wind • Non-Renewable Sources • Coal • Natural Gas • Propane • Petroleum • Uranium
Energy • Project • Student draw sources of energy • Receive information from NEED handouts • Read • Highlight • Answer the PLTW based questions • Create posters • Must include: • Graph • Pictures
Energy • Presentations • Students hang posters in hallway • Students • Present their information • View every poster • Complete graphic organizer • Rate all posters (anonymously)
Major Topic #3 Green Building design
Green Building Design • Curriculum • Developed for this class and lesson • Influenced by • Year end trip to the Museum of Science and Industry • Smart House • DePauw University Green Building Initiative
Green Building Design Resource #1 • DePauw University • Nationally known liberal arts college in Greencastle • Strong interest in LEED certified buildings • 2 certified buildings on campus • Many resources
Green Building Design Resource #2 • Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago • Year end field trip • Some curriculum and examples online • Smart House at Museum of Science and Industry
Green Building Design Resource #3 • The Henry Ford River Rouge Plant • One of the most environmentally friendly auto factories in the U.S • NEH summer workshop • Many of the workshops relate to TE • Aspects of technical history • Technology’s effect on the environment
Green Building Design • Curriculum • Introduce students to the topic of green building design • Topics include • Energy • Wastewater • Natural lighting • Building materials
Green Building Design • Project • Using Google SketchUp students • Design a green residential building • Design a green industrial building
Green Building Design • Project Presentation • Students detail • Building materials • Energy generation • Wastewater collection • Natural lighting • Heating/cooling • Present project • However they choose • Drawings • Impress
Major Topic #4 “Conservation innovation”
Conservation Innovation • Curriculum • Combines all other elements of the class • Integrates core concepts from GTT/TE • Fosters • Research • Design • Teamwork • Entrepreneurship skills
Conservation Innovation • Project • General overview from the teacher • In the form of a handout • Mostly on their own/partners to: • Research solutions • Synthesize the ideas • Ideas given through • Class examples • Moodle links
Conservation Innovation • Students • Brainstorm solutions • Find a partner • Decide on project • Rough sketches • Finalize plans using • Inventor • SketchUp • Build product • Marketing plan • Presentation
Topic #5 Running the school’s recycling program
School’s Recycling • On Friday’s students collect: • Paper • Aluminum • Plastic • Cardboard • Joint Effort between • West Central Solid Waste District • Abitibi Bowater Recycling
School’s Recycling • Benefits • Students see the benefit of recycling • Able to participate in the process • Money for the school • $5 - $15 per ton for paper • Money for aluminum as well
Topic #6 Energy conservation challenge