Waste Stream Analysis
Preparation Collect one or more containers of "clean" household garbage.
Precaution Due to the possibility of used tissues or broken glass or other sharp objects present, the teacher should provide the trash can or bag for the students to examine. Sort through the classroom trash can and remove all tissues and sharp objects or bring in a bag of garbage from home after removing any items that the students should not be handling (e.g., dirty tissues, diapers, glass of any type, etc.).
Procedure
- Spread the tarp or plastic out on the floor and dump the classroom wastebasket out in front of the class. Once the garbage is spread out in front of the students, have students put on gloves and assist with sorting the garbage. Separate the trash into as many categories as possible, including non-recyclable and recyclable, reusable, etc. You can use the categories on the data sheet or have the students determine their own categories during this sorting process. Weigh each group of wastes.
- Leaving the trash spread out and visible, discuss the amount and types of garbage you found. Using the data on the breakdown of Municipal Solid Waste in the United States, compare the classroom sample with national waste composition.
- Discuss which waste categories could be eliminated by reusing, recycling, or composting.
- Give each student a data collection page and ask them to keep track of their family's garbage as it is thrown away or placed in the compost or recycling bin. (Allow 2-3 days for completion; if possible, schedule over the weekend). Collect the data sheets and determine a class average for each category. You might want to have information on family size as well. Obviously a family of 4 will produce less waste than a family of 6. Graph the results. Compare this average with the classroom breakdown and also with the national waste composition.
- Use math skills to determine weights and percentages of materials.
- Once you have determined how much waste is produced by your class and how much can be removed from the waste stream by recycling, reusing and composting, you can use this data to make an estimate about the amount of waste produced by all classes in the school and all families in the community, and how much can be prevented from going to the landfill or incinerator.
Follow-up Questions and Review
- Which category represents the largest amount of garbage?
- Name differences in the types of waste produced at school and at home.
- How do your results differ from the national averages?
- Do you see any reason why your results might be different?
(examples are: curbside recycling available in your community; season of year analysis is done - there is less yard waste during winter)
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 Grade Level: 6
Science SOL: 6.11 (can be easily adapted to 4.8 and younger grades)
Materials:
- Large plastic or paper tarp
- plastic gloves for each
student
- one or more waste containers filled with garbage
- bathroom scale
Objective: Students will measure by weight how much waste is generated by their families and use this information to make an estimate for their community.
Vocabulary Words: incinerator landfill waste stream
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