Canadian Environment Awards 2008 Canadian Environment Awards Network
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Canadian Geographic
Toronto Dominion Bank Financial Group
Prize sponsor
Panasonic
 
In association with
Learning for a Sustainable Future
 
World Wildlife Fund

The Canadian Environment Awards
The Green Team Challenge 2008

JUNIOR

Gold Award

Dunrankin Drive Public School
Mississauga, Ontario

PHOTO COURTESY NATALIE SCHNEIDER
 
In 2007, Dunrankin Drive Public School launched a creative series of initiatives in the name of the environment. Inspired by a film about the effects of global warming on polar bear habitat, students scrounged through closets and basements for cast-off items, such as stuffed toy animals, children’s books and skateboards, for their fundraising Polar Bear Garage Sale. An object lesson in reuse versus waste, the sale also raised $200 to sponsor two polar bears through World Wildlife Fund Canada.

A computer program that allows students to measure their individual ecological footprints while keeping tabs on the school’s overall environmental impact has inspired awareness to reduce paper and electricity consumption. Reusable lunch containers are now available for Trashless Tuesdays at the student-staffed Tuck Shop, which also sells lightly packaged toys and healthy snacks. This spring, students are raising money to fund a well in rural India. “All the proceeds go toward green causes,” notes teacher Natalie Schneider. “They’re learning about having a common goal and being global citizens. Plus it’s really helping to build a sense of community in our school.”

Runners-Up

J.W. Walker School
St. Francis of Assisi
Notre-Dame du Sacré-Coeur
J. Douglas Hodgson Elementary School
Ecole Grosvenor Wentworth School





SENIOR
Gold Award

Henry Street High School
Whitby, Ontario

PHOTO: NICK DRIVER
 
Earth Day at Henry Street High School each April has grown into an all-encompassing Earth Week Festival. Students have naturalized the school grounds by planting trees — 42 to date and another 20 this spring — and tending a native perennial garden. Festival events include art displays, photo contests, guest speakers and Earth-themed lessons. Awareness-raising signs (“If you choose to drive today, make up for it another way”) offer students the opportunity to collect a carbon tax from all comers. “The tax helped preserve acres of Thickson’s Woods on Lake Ontario, an important remnant of old-growth white pines,” says teacher Elka Samanski.

The school’s green spirit also extends to annual cleanups of nearby community parks and shorelines, such as Whitby Harbour and Lynde Creek. In response to the widening of a highway through a nearby wetland, students joined a letter-writing campaign that convinced city planners to create an underpass for deer, beaver, turtles and rabbits. “The kids felt that they made a difference,” says Samanski. “They learned a life lesson — things really can be changed.”

Amid the grove of newly planted trees, students and teachers are designing an outdoor classroom. Complete with a boulder garden, benches and tables, the multi-purpose setting will inspire creativity and scientific observation, while providing an accessible green space for lunch and recreation.

Runners-Up

Bracebridge and Muskoka Lakes Secondary School
Kincardine & District Secondary School
Vincent Massey High School
Elliot Lake Secondary School
Fredericton High School


The Green Team Challenge is sponsored by
TD Bank Financial Group.



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