Sydenham High School celebrates Earth
DayBy Julie Druker
Shelby Vickery explored using tap water as a form of electricity at
Sydenham High School’s Earth Day Carousel.
On April 22 as part of their focus on
Earth Day, students at Sydenham High School participated in the Earth
Day Carousel, a display of student projects whose focus was the
environment. Included in close to 40 displays were a number of
projects that focused on environmental awareness and various
practical strategies and solutions to reduce our carbon
footprint. Kieran Doyle, Jen Pople and Rachel Givens did a garbage
audit of Sydenham High School, in which they examined 18 bags of
school garbage that were collected on April 8. Their findings were
an eye opener- of those 18 bags only two were actually garbage. Four
could have been recycled as paper; another four could have been
recycled in blue boxes and the last four could have been composted.
After crunching the numbers the group found that 89% of the garbage
collected could have been recycled. Doyle said about the project,
“It was a messy job but it was well worth it since the statistics
showed us that yearly SHS produces 37,000 pounds of garbage. We
learned that if students made more of an effort to recycle, that
number could be reduced by 27,000 pounds." Doyle hopes the
results of the study will go a long way in raising student awareness
and that after seeing the numbers, students will be motivated to
take those 20 extra steps to the recycle bin. Shelby Vickery, in
her project titled “Tap Water: A Form of Electricity”,
demonstrated how household tap water can be used to conduct
electricity. Her display demonstrated how an electrical current
produced from 6 glasses of house tap water is enough to produce
3 to 6 volts of electricity - enough to power a calculator and
according to her, other household items like lamps. Shelby explained,
“The technology could be used in emergency situations and for other
household items that don’t require too much electricity.” Tyler
Hill, Adam Wilson, Brianna Jeffreys and Chris Lafontaine made a
pop can solar heater that can be used as a home heater and another
group explored the environmental impact of oil spills. Most of the
projects developed from Erik Rutherford’s grade 12 class on Human
Environmental Resource Management. The day’s events also
included a school-wide clean up of the Sydenham community, a BBQ,
karaoke and a concert by Rock Bottom at the football field. The
day’s aim was three-fold: to explore various issues and alternative
green options, and to raise students’ awareness of environmental
issues while making a practical contribution to cleaning up the
school and community. Sydenham High School’s Assistant Vice
Principal Kelly Roantree was pleased with the day’s event, and as
acting chair of the school’s eco-team, is hoping to see the school
take on more green initiatives in the near future in the hopes of
earning gold status eco certification for this year. Last year the
school received a bronze medal.
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