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4.3 Recycle Races.d2250d55

This document provides instructions for an educational game called "Recycle Races" that teaches students about recycling and proper waste sorting. The game involves dividing students into teams who must pass waste items through a line and correctly identify whether each item should be recycled, composted, or put in the rubbish bin. The winning team is the one that sorts all the waste correctly. The activity aims to help students understand recycling processes, benefits of recycling, and how contamination can be reduced by proper sorting.

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Veronica Chindon
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
95 views1 page

4.3 Recycle Races.d2250d55

This document provides instructions for an educational game called "Recycle Races" that teaches students about recycling and proper waste sorting. The game involves dividing students into teams who must pass waste items through a line and correctly identify whether each item should be recycled, composted, or put in the rubbish bin. The winning team is the one that sorts all the waste correctly. The activity aims to help students understand recycling processes, benefits of recycling, and how contamination can be reduced by proper sorting.

Uploaded by

Veronica Chindon
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Recycle races

Learning Objectives

Understand the recycling process, the benefits of recycling and which materials can be recycled. Develop good sorting behaviour to reduce contamination (putting unsuitable materials into recycle bins).

Curriculum Links

Science, Geography, Citizenship, PE

Sustainable Schools Doorways


Doorway 4 Purchasing and Waste

Materials:

Two bags (with one item for each pupil) of clean recyclable, non recyclable and organic waste items (or use pictures of food waste items instead), two sets of coloured stickers (e.g. one red set, one blue set) to attach to the waste items in each bag, three containers clearly labelled recycle, compost and rubbish, a space suitable for pupils to move around.

A. How to play
1. Discuss the properties of items that can be recycled and composted. Discuss what problems arise if the wrong materials are put in the wrong bin (contamination). 2. Divide the group or class into two teams and ask each team to form a straight line. 3. Place the three clearly labelled containers at the front of the room, one for general rubbish, one for recyclables and one for compost. 4. Place a bag containing a mixture of waste items at the front of each line. Ensure there are the same number of items as there are number of pupils in each team. 5. When the race starts, the first team member takes a waste item from the bag at the front and passes it through their legs to the next person, who passes it on overhead. This continues all the way down the line. 6. When it reaches the last person, they hold the item up in the air and the team shouts out recycle, compost or rubbish, depending on what bin it should go into. 7. The team member then goes to the front of the line and picks the next item from the bag, starting the process again. 8. When the bag is empty, the team should sit down to show that they have finished. The winning team is the team that sorts the rubbish correctly, not who finishes first, unless there is a tie. 9. Go through each teams answers with the class to reinforce which items should be recycled, and which bin the rubbish should have been put into.

Extension ideas
Investigate whats in your classs waste bin. Brainstorm ways to reduce your waste. Research the benefits of recycling and research and discuss the recycling process e.g. what happens to paper when it gets recycled? (visit the Facts section on www.recyclenow.com or the section on Environmental benefits in this Action Pack).

Top tip

This activity is ideal to run in a hall, a gym, or a playground to allow pupils space to run around.

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