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The Story of Stuff and the Circular Economy. Learning Objectives To practise discussing and drawing out key points To understand the difference between a ‘take-make-dispose’ approach and a circular economy approach. Watch the film The Story of Stuff
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Learning Objectives • To practise discussing and drawing out key points • To understand the difference between a ‘take-make-dispose’ approach and a circular economy approach
Watch the film The Story of Stuff • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9GorqroigqM • Answer the questions
More questions to think about… • What kinds of materials do you throw out after one or two uses? • What kinds of materials get put out on your rubbish collection day • What is the average life of computers? TVs? Are they recycled? • How does material use and waste today compare with your parents’ and grandparents’ experiences? • What kinds of clothing stay in cupboards for the longest time? Do you buy fashion items? How many seasons do they last before they become outdated? • What do you think about £1 shops? What items are available there? Why are they so cheap? • What do you think about the steps in “the treadmill”? Do you think that people are that naive? What examples confirm that model of consumption? • What is “retail therapy”? Does it work? Does it last? What are people really looking for? Do they find it in material goods? • People used to spend more time making their own household items (food, clothing etc) Are people being robbed of opportunities to express their creativity in a consumer culture? Could that have an effect on their mental health?
How does the Waste Hierarchy relate to the ‘Take – make – dispose’ linear approach?
The Circular Economy • A different approach is to: ‘Design – make – reprocess – reuse’ A circular approach
The Circular Economy http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N-cWaRRLh3k OR https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCRKvDyyHmI
How does the Waste Hierarchy relate to the Circular Economy approach?
The Circular Economy What difference would this approach make? • More materials re-used • Less/no waste • Lease rather than buy • Buy a service rather than a product • Changes in jobs from manufacturing to better designs • Re-think what we buy and how we use things
Use the workbook to record your responses • What did I learn in this lesson? • How does Ethical Science or Technology Justice apply to this lesson? OR • Reflect on the use of science for good in how things are designed and made