Resources

Resources

Foundational Knowledge - Recycling

1. Foundational Knowledge

EU Environment Agency (EEA): Waste and Recycling in Europe - Key Facts

Offers clear explanations of Europe's waste generation trends, recycling rates, and EU targets (Circular Economy Action Plan). Suitable for grades 6-9 with teacher guidance.

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National Geographic Kids: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

Child-friendly explanation of recycling basics, including plastics, metals, and paper. Engaging visuals and simple text for grades 3-6.

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Waste Hero Education

Free, ready-to-use lesson plans and workshops on recycling, zero waste, and circular economy for K-12 and university students. Includes downloadable PDFs, PowerPoints, and teacher guides.

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Eco Schools

Provides a curricular framework for advancing circular economy plus lesson plans and posters (multiple languages) to integrate waste reduction, reuse, and recycling into school curricula.

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2. Multimedia and Engagement

SciShow Kids: Where Does Recycling Go?

Friendly video that follows items through the recycling system. Introductory content for grades 3-6.

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TED-Ed: What really happens to the plastic you throw away?

Illustrates how everyday plastic waste can take very different environmental paths. Suitable for grades 5-9.

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The Story of Stuff Project: The Story of Plastic

Focuses on the lifecycle of plastic products with strong visuals and storytelling. Suitable for grades 5-9.

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EEA: Recycling Rates in EU Countries (Infographic)

Colorful map-based infographic showing how EU nations compare in recycling. Useful for class discussion (grades 6-9).

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3. Practical Tools and Lessons

EPA: Recycling 101 Classroom Activities

Free classroom activities on sorting waste, identifying recyclable materials, and understanding contamination. Includes worksheets and instructions. Suitable for grades 4-7.

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TES Resources: Recycling Sorting Game

Printable cards and posters for sorting items into paper, plastic, metal, organic waste, and landfill for grades 3-6.

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Plastic Odyssey

Free educational kit for schools: seven interdisciplinary activities, online games, virtual vessel tour, and plastic-pollution investigation module for ages 8-16.

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Rstuff

Resource library with downloadable packs for primary and secondary levels, including worksheets, posters, and assemblies.

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4. Case Studies and Best Practices

Ljubljana - Europe's Zero Waste Capital

Ljubljana became the first EU capital with a zero-waste strategy. Recycling rose from 29% to over 60% in a decade.

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Flanders Recycling Success - 70% Recycling Rate

Analyze why Belgium's Flanders region has one of the highest recycling rates in the world (door-to-door collection and clear sorting rules).

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School Upcycling Projects Across Europe

Examples of schools turning waste into art, furniture, and storage solutions.

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Return Bottle System (Deposit Scheme) - Germany and Nordic countries

Discussion topic: Why do deposit systems reach over 90% collection rates and would this work in your country?

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5. Assessments and Interaction

Interactive Quiz: Sort the Bin

Students drag images into the correct bin categories: paper, plastic, glass, metal, organic, hazardous.

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Discussion Prompt: Why Do People Still Not Recycle?

Guiding questions: Is it confusing, are bins easy to access, are people motivated, are there cultural differences among EU countries?

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Project: Design a Zero-Waste Classroom

Create a floor plan or digital mock-up with recycling stations, compost area, upcycled storage solutions, and waste-minimizing rules.

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Debate Topic: Should Single-Use Plastics Be Banned in All Schools?

Group A supports the ban. Group B opposes due to cost, practicality, and hygiene. Students propose a realistic school policy.

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Reflection Exercise: My Recycling Footprint

List three items thrown away today. For each one, check if it could be recycled or reused, then define one change for tomorrow.

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