ACE BlogHOT & BOTHERED

Northeast high schools start race to reduce carbon emissions

Do you want to win $1,000 and earn the title of the greenest high school in the Northeast? We thought so!

ACE and National Grid Foundation are kicking off the Green Dependence Day Challenge in Albany this week, presenting the award-winning and free ACE Assembly to approximately 1,500 students at Albany High School, Schenectady High School and Cobleskill Richmondville High School.

The contest is simple: get your Action Team cranking through carbon-reducing projects, anything from starting that much-needed recycling program to installing building energy efficiency retrofits. The Action Teams that complete the greatest number, and scope, of climate-related projects will move onto the final round in the fall.

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Feeling the Love

Today, the Center for Climate Change Communication at George Mason University announced that ACE has won their Climate Change Communicator of the Year Award for 2011.

That’s a lot of “climate change” and “communications” to follow, but it essentially means that ACE is earning some serious kudos for explaining climate science in a way that sticks.

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Little Rock’s iMatter March

This past week I was finally able to secure a meeting with Little Rock’s Mayor Mark Stodola.

Three dedicated environmental fanatics and myself sat down with the Mayor and his top environmental advirosr, Melinda, and asked question after question about how to have a successful event in Little Rock.

After weeks of stressing because I had no clue where to begin, I started making long lists of potential aspects that could be incorporated into the march. However, this meeting was the reality check I needed. Mayor Stodola and Melinda were bubbling with their own ideas but they managed to help me consolidate all the thoughts I had into a coherent plan for this iMatter March.

In today’s society of big, big, big, I was bent on trying to plan a huge march. My meeting however, made me realize that a smaller more intimate march would be more effective in Little Rock. We decided to make creating young activists the goal of this march. Mayor Stodola, and environmental educator, and myself will be discussing the importance of environmental awareness and the passion of youth to improve our environmental sustainability.

Being a bustling high school student, it is hard to dedicate time to planning events and marches such as this. Mayor Stodola and Melinda taught me that I have to tone down my ambitions so that I can implement this plan effectively.

If you are curious about Little Rock’s iMatter March visit imattermarch.org

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Friendly rivalry and prizes get results

By Crystal Xie, ACE Field Correspondent and student at Rosemead High School in Rosemead, CA

On Saturday, April 16, the Rosemead Ecology Club hosted a Park Clean up at our local Rosemead Park. We got together and tidied the place up for a better and cleaner place to hang out.

I was surprised by the turnout at first. We didn’t know everyone, there were so many people there. It was a very hot day, and we played some icebreaker games to get to know one another, and then split into groups of three to four people.

As groups split up, we announced that the team that collected the most trash during the cleanup would win the cleanup challenge and some small prizes. Well, this hyped everyone up and they raced off in every direction, scouring the area for any scraps of trash. There were even some teams competing for fragments of gum wrappers and bottle caps.

After about thirty to forty-five minutes of cleaning, we compared trash heaps to see who got the most. The team with the most trash won seemingly small prizes – bubbles, candy, and fun post-it notes. But, really, everyone won because all participants chowed down on pizza and ice tea.

Organizing and implementing this Park Clean Up showed me that prizes and competition are amazing motivators! And, they helped us boost our turnout. It is great to know that there are people who will lend a hand to help our environment, and all they need is a little push and a prize at stake to help them focus.

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[Video] Scream 5 – Finally out of Material

By Liv Barista, ACE Field Correspondent + student at Wheaton Warrenville South in Chicago

Click here to watch what happens when an average teenage girl sleepover turns to comedic fright, with an environmental message of course…

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Chicago students save e-waste from landfills

By Joaquin S., a seventh grade leader of the Locke School Green Team in Chicago, Illinois

On April 6th, 2011, we had our biggest, greenest, and most important event yet!

On the overcast and chilly Wednesday, April 6th, 2011, Locke School Green Team members made history in their community by holding an incredibly successful E-waste drive and collecting Do One Thing pledges, or DOTs.

“The day started out heavily, we were supposed to get to school at 11:00 A.M. to get a head start but by when we got there, there was already over 50 electronics donated by teachers waiting to be recycled!” said Carlos P., one of the E-waste drive crew members.

The day was long and grueling; one family after another would walk in ready to make a change in our community by recycling there damaged or used electronics. In the morning, we received five boxes and six pallets to fill. By 3:00 in the afternoon, we had to request another truck driver with more boxes and pallets!

The next day the Green Team members found out they had collected over 470 donations for a total of 4,211 lbs of e-waste.

E-Waste collected:
Printers – 509 lbs
Monitors – 864 lbs
TVs – 1037 lbs
CPUs – 640 lbs
Small electronics– 1161 lbs

Instead of going to landfills, over 4,211 pounds of e-waste instead was refurbished and went to needy families, schools, non-profits, and even overseas!

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Who’s hearing about school energy use? Maybe President Obama…

By Shreya Indukuri, Junior at the Harker School in San Jose, CA, and ACE Youth Advisory Board Member

To sum up our long weekend in Washington, D.C. at Powershift 2011 in one word: incredible!

From April 15-18, Daniela and I met some amazing people and got inspired by young people doing some awesome things in their communities. Check out more about it in Daniela’s blog post.

Monday, April 18th was a particularly eventful day for us because we had the wonderful opportunity to meet Aneesh Chopra, Chief Technology Officer of the United States (as advisor to President Obama), and Arun Majumdar, the Acting Under Secretary Of Energy and the Director of ARPA-E (the Advanced Research Project Agency on Energy for the federal government).

First, we visited the Office of Science and Technology Policy, right next to the White House! After an awesome introduction from the Alliance for Climate Education (ACE) on the importance of climate education for youth through their ACE multimedia assembly, we talked about how we were lucky enough to use the resources provided by ACE to start our own environmental project at our school. The smart energy system we installed saved our school thousands of dollars and we had a 250% return on investment along with cutting our school’s energy bill by 13% in one year!

Mr. Chopra loved our project and he pledged to work on a plan to have schools benchmark their energy consumption using the EPA’s Portfolio Manager. This is fantastic because energy benchmarking is the first step of our 4-step smart energy school project that we work on in our organization, SmartPowerEd.

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What’s So Green About Prom?

Well, that’s up to you – how do you want to use you’re climate ninja skills to cut carbon and have fun at prom? We’ve got a few ideas to help you green your prom and even a little contest over there on our Facebook page.

Here’s how it works on Facebook – take a picture of you (and maybe your friends) rocking either an eco-outfit or vintage/home-made accessories and post it to our Facebook page. Maybe you’re going to wear a vintage dress or borrow jewelry, or maybe your corsage is made from a local flower – whatever you do, send us a pic.

Then, there’s Facebook part dos – the carpool shot. We’re looking for the best picture of your most creative carpooling to prom, like Ashley did last week (picture –>).

We’re giving out $50 to 2 winners – best in each category (eco-outfit & carpool).

Now back to greening your prom. Here’s a list of our top 5 ideas for green prom projects. Click on any one of them to find resources to help you do it.

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ACE loves teachers

Happy teacher appreciation week! I’d like to give a special shout-out to two of my favorite ACE teachers: Leigh Metcalfe and Genevieve Morehouse at Reed High School in Sparks, Nevada.

These ladies rock. I know they spend 8 hours a day in a room full of students, teaching science, but somehow they still manage to be incredibly involved with ACE and the students in their Action Team in addition to all their coursework.

I met Leigh and Genevieve two years ago when I first came to Reed High to give the ACE presentation. I was blown away by the work Leigh had put into organizing the assembly – never before had a teacher printed out name cards for the end of the rows so students knew where their class sat!

It took one year of false starts to get Reed’s ACE Action Team off the ground, but last fall when I came back to present, both teachers told me they were committed to making the team a success. They both managed to strike that difficult balance between helping their students to take on projects like a reusable water bottle sale, and supporting the students to take charge of carrying out the project themselves.

On Earth Day, Leigh and Genevieve stood proudly to one side as their team, the Reed High Eco Warriors, presented their proposal to green their school in the GREENevada high school sustainability contest. The students’ spoke eloquently about the impact that renovating their school’s bathrooms would have on the money, energy and carbon savings of their school, accompanied by an eye-popping Powerpoint presentation and one student on the ukulele. When all the other teams were rehearsing their presentations just before they took the stage, the Eco Warriors had their presentation so nailed down, they were practicing their answers to the judges’ questions. At the end of the day, when all the prizes were announced, Reed High took home the first prize of $12,000 to green their school’s bathrooms.

Leigh and Genevieve, thank you so much for all the hard work and extra hours you put into helping your students. You’re showing them that they really can make a difference. Reed High is a greener, healthier school because of you. I can’t wait to see those bathrooms!

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Solar-Powered DOT

ACE is on the road to 100,000 DOTs – we’ve inspired more than 90,000 people and now we’re about to go 6-figures. Are you one of them? There’s still time.

We’re building a partnership with our new friends at Oakland-based Solio, a company that sells portable solar chargers for phones, ipods, lights and more. This means that we’ll more chances for you to win sick prizes, like this portable solar charger. The first Solio charger giveaway was given to a lucky and random student who shared a DOT during Earth Week (we’ll have her story up here soon) and the second will be given to the lucky student who shares our 100,000th DOT.

Is that going to be you?

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