Earth week school tours came to an end on April 23, 2010. Two tours a day for five days, does not really sound like much, I was exhausted! I have to say keeping 25 + kids and their supervisors interested and engaged in a recycling facility tour is a challenge. Some of the kids get it in an instant and ask outstanding, engaged and interesting questions. Others, well, you just have to keep working the stories and the angles to interest them and to get them excited about waste diversion and recycling.
Four tours done and six to go (I have two a day all week). So far so good. I find when I am “touring” it sometimes takes me one tour to get into the groove again and engage with the kids fully.
Urban Impact is paying for all the classes to be bused into the facilities (Richmond M-W, New Westmisnter Th & Fr). This year we have also raised the stakes of the tours, we are offering a $500 prize for the class that provides us with the 5 ways in which they as a class can reduce waste and 5 ways in which they can personally reduce waste. In addition to the grand prize we give away prizes for the 3 best questions (each tour) and a cool non battery flashlight (curtesy of Science World) for the best science question asked. It certainly seems to motivate the questions.
I enjoy the tours, often the questions inspire some blog topics. In addition the energy and interest of the kids is envigorating and a challenge for me! Keeps me on my toes.
Here are a couple of the good questions:
Fun questions to answer!
Cancer is one of those diseases that has touched us all. Each of us can likely tell a story where the human spirit and medicine triumphed over this disease, and sadly it is likely that each of us can tell a story where the disease won and stole someone away.
April is Cancer month in Canada. The Canadian Cancer Society a remarkable organization calls on us all to give generously to help battle this disease. Urban Impact is doing its part to help raise awareness. As a company we have given $5,000 on behalf of all of our employees, and we have put the CCS logo and daffodil up on our trucks. This is the first time we have put another logo or icon up on our very distinct and clean trucks, we hope that the public will notice and consider a gift or donation to this worthy organization.
http://www.cancer.ca/British%20Columbia-Yukon.aspx?sc_lang=en
I know the 40 million + Twitter users are using tweets in 40 million + ways. I am sure everyone has a different goal or reason to use it, each valid. I embarked on the Twitter road about a year ago, with no clear objective in mind, I simply recognized that this growing tool in social media would likely keep me current and (hopefully) on the edge of what people are thinking and doing as it relates to sustainable topics and issues.
I use Twitter every day perhaps even a few times each day. Often the most interesting comments come from a random Tweeter who mentions a green issue just once. Some of the people or organizations I follow who are branding themselves as green, seem to be very repetitive in their messaging or quite frankly it is 20 or so core messages that rotate regularily. Twitter’s value is that it is a conversation not a rotating message.
Some days it seems you are having a Twitter conversation with yourself and no one else is listening, which could be the case. But even if no one is listening, my Twitter account has a clear and concise history of these thoughts. If I re read them it holds me accountable and reminds me of green commitments that I have made to myself, our clients and our staff.