Book Zac Whyte Now For 2011-2012 06/11/2011
If you can't see the YouTube video above click here for the Vimeo version. Now is the time to book me (Zac Whyte) for a presentation to your class, division, or school in the coming 2011-2012 school year. It was a huge year in 2010-2011 with several multi-class presentations, keynote addresses, workshops, and juicy energy boosting one off prezzies that made some waves. I'm so excited to engage your students and teach them how to direct positive change in our community. I specialize in working with youth and young adults aged 12-30 and if you live in School District 71 or School District 72 you can receive presentations free of charge (some content and booking restrictions apply). I always work with your curriculum, especially at higher grade levels, to ensure your students are kept on track for final exam preparations and I'm always open to integrating creative new ideas together with you to maximize your themes, over-arching questions, or lesson plans. Be sure to look through this blog for examples. You will find everything from grade 8 applied math reviews based on the Comox Valley fresh water infrastructures to week long Social Studies 11 environment units. The only limit is our imagination and time so let's make something brilliant together. If you are a teacher or administrator in SD71 or SD72 I look forward to booking a presentation or keynote speech with you soon. Dates are currently available from September 2011-June 2012. Have a fantastic and regenerative summer. Contact me today at PowerOfR@gmail.com and put SPEAKING REQUEST FOR ZAC in the subject line. It's that easy. Add Comment There's no question that Highland's Eco-Team has made massive progress this year in their school and around the community. They have mobilized and organized to effectively implement school-wide composting, recycling, battery collection, broom pulling (invasive foreign plant species destruction), fund-raising, and awareness campaigns. The Eco-Team has even created their own website to organize their efforts further and help new recruits become educated faster. The Eco-Team even has a delegation that sits in on Comox Town Council meetings to offer youth perspectives on environmental and development initiatives. It has been a year of steady building and hard work but what they have achieved in such a short amount of time is remarkable. Well done team! Thank you for being community leaders who make a positive difference. Highland's Eco-Team has become a family for me this year. Although I was unable to attend all of the meetings, after school, and weekend gatherings, the team was extremely motivated to push through some really tough challenges on their own steam. Initiating a compost program in a school is tricky because it requires students to pick up the compost buckets from classrooms each day and hand wash them each week. This year members of the Eco-Team rose to the challenge every single day to make that happen. The effort has paid off. Thousands of pounds of solid waste has been diverted from the landfill. In September there will be tons of fresh, homemade, nutrient rich dirt to play with. Everyday is Earth Day at Highland Secondary. To send your best to Highland please leave a comment on this blog and then visit the team's website http://highlandecoteam.com where you can order a Highland Eco-Team shirt to show your support. Have a happy Earth Day today. “Zac has been an inspiration to Highland's Eco Team. His support and ability to network with other organizations has been instrumental in our success as a group of individuals seeking action and systemic change. It is because of Zac we have a professional looking website, and it is because of Zac our fall school wide assembly was deeper in scope and more informative than it would have been without him. Zac has been a coach, an advisor, our own special guru and a role model. We consider him an integral part of our Eco Team and are grateful he is such an active member of our community. It is the bringing together of such individuals that will catalyze the change needed to improve our world.” Jill Peacocke – Highland Secondary Teacher and Eco Team Sponsor It’s amazing how many batteries we actually use. It seems like everything these days is powered by a battery of some kind. Laptops, ipods, cameras, toys, flashlights, and watches are used in many households. The scary thing is that these amazing technologies, that fuel our appetite for batteries, are filling our landfills with poisons. I’m not saying stop using electronics but I am saying let’s make sure that the dead batteries that run our gadgets stay far away from the landfill. I found a few old batteries in my garage. You’ve likely seen old batteries before but it only adds to my point of being diligent with your disposal practices. Batteries contain different chemicals that can cause explosions and even burn holes in your skin. That’s not pretty. The batteries here in the picture are the most common sizes. Billions of them enter landfills each year around the world. I don’t know about you but that freaks me right out. ![]() When a battery goes in the landfill it doesn’t take long before its metal casing gets crushed by heavy objects, it rusts in the rain, and then corrodes enough to release the toxic paste inside. The toxic paste dissolves into rain and ground water. Once the poison is in the water, animals and humans might drink it and contract cancer or sickness from the dissolved poison crystals. Collect your old batteries in a cardboard box and make sure that they don’t get thrown into the landfill. If you go to a school that has a battery collection program make sure you support it. Tell your friends and family about the dangers of batteries in the landfill. Once your battery box is full or every six months, take the dead batteries to your local Waste Management Centre recycling area. You don’t want to have batteries like the ones in the picture above lying around your home. I’m really proud of all the schools that are participating in this program. Keep up the great work! ![]() Working At Southgate Middle School Southgate Middle School has been a real focus for me this year. So far I have presented to over 10 different classes there on various topics and given multiple leadership workshops. Southgate has been battling a tough mentality around the school that produces more than desirable amounts of litter in the schoolyard. Building a greater sense pride in ownership of the school is important to all of us. We don’t like spending our day surrounded in garbage. It was high time to get serious and rethink the solid waste that is literally making mountains around us at the school yard and in our community. Good inroads are being made around the school and kids are feeling more empowered to engage the problem of litter head on, in and out of the school. When our consumption habits are compounded by irresponsible waste management, scary things happen around the world. There is currently a giant island of plastic that is twice the size of Texas spinning around in the Pacific Ocean. This is affecting sea life and our life by getting into the food chain and poisoning the environment. The amount of garbage that makes its way to the ocean is staggering. Over 2 million water bottles are being consumed and tossed every 5 minutes in the United States, and over 4 million coffee cups are being thrown away each day in Canada. Although most of these items sadly end up in our landfills, a percentage of them also make their way to the ocean after being carried by rainwater. Even a small percentage is a huge amount when you’re dealing with numbers like that. That’s why litter is such concern. It’s time to fall in love with tap water and travel mugs permanently. The students at Southgate are now making the move to clean up “the swamp.” Go Gators Go! “You totally had kid’s attention the entire time – and that says something for Middle School kids. Your knowledge and passion were passed along effectively. The kids really remembered what you said and took to heart your thoughts and ideas.” - Marjorie George – Teacher ![]() Highland Eco-Team Meeting Litter is also a concern for Highland Secondary’s Eco-Team. Highland has been working hard to manage garbage awareness along Guthrie in Comox. Irresponsible customers and the introduction of new fast-food chains on Guthrie have amplified the amount of litter alongside of the road. Plastic cups and plastic wrappers are making their way into the dairy farm field that spans the stretch between Anderton and Pritchard. It may not seem like a big deal at first glance, but it is… it’s a very big deal. Each year the farmer cuts his field for silage (a fermented grass that is used to feed cows) and sometimes plastic based litter hides in the grass when it’s cut. This plastic gets chopped up and eventually is eaten by dairy cows on the farm. Cows are a ruminant animal, which means that they have multiple stomachs. Any plastic in their food can actually kill them because it lodges between their stomachs and plugs their digestive system. Dairy cows, or any cow for that matter, can get sick and die because people are littering. It’s a major problem that can be easily solved with common sense and diligence. Hold your friends accountable the next time they litter anywhere. You are the solution that the world is waiting for. On a warmer than usual Valentine’s Day I joined the Highland Eco-Team for brunch with longtime community activist and two-time Citizen of the Year Ruth Masters. We all sat together and listened to the inspiring stories that have helped shape the Comox Valley in so many ways. ![]() Ruth spoke to the importance of protecting the environment and engaging the community at a political level. She told stories of ascending Comox Glacier in 1938, protecting woodland areas from the logging industry, naming 50 lakes after fallen WWII soldiers from Vancouver Island, the importance of honouring the past by directing the future, and being an active citizen on a daily basis. Ruth has been a longtime hero of mine and I always revel in her energy and spite. At 89 years of age her fire is still burning with a passion that can move mountains. It was a real treat to hear her speak to the Eco-Team too. She has a sense of humour about things that only comes with decades of experience battling the exploitive fringe of social governance. ![]() At the end of our meeting Ruth was given an honorary membership to the Highland Eco-Team. She is still active in issues around the Comox Valley but her response was clear. She implored the students of the Eco-Team to take the torch of leadership and keep it burning. I have no doubt that they will. Thank you for a memorable and inspiring day Ruth. ![]() Carihi High in Campbell River is setting goals of zero-waste in 2010 and taking action to make it happen. Today I visited several classrooms to deliver one hour presentations about the globalization of garbage and local solutions to rethink, reduce, reuse and recycle our way to a cleaner planet. It was an inspiring day today because so many positive initiatives happened in such a short amount of time. After each presentation students had questions but more importantly they were taking action to implement a full blown composting program at the school before the end of the day. To help things along I brought along some equipment to make it happen. The Power Of R and Comox Strathcona Waste Management donated two Earth Machine composters, two battery collection bins and twenty classroom compost buckets to the school. By the end of lunch hour the composters were installed, the buckets were distributed and the principal’s door was being knocked on by students to report what they were up to. I didn’t even know it was happening, it just did. I spoke The Green Team Environment Club over lunch hour about actions of other schools on Vancouver Island and ways to connect with those schools to strengthen their own programs. The club remarkably tripled its membership today and hopefully that enthusiasm will continue to bring Carihi High closer to its goals. The school is setting a good example for other schools, businesses, and households in Campbell River. I’ve seen this positive momentum build before in past projects and I can guarantee that Carihi High will change the environmental legacy of Campbell River in 2010. Before the Christmas break at their annual Turkey Dinner Night the Green Team will announce its initiative to the rest of the school. Over one hundred students are already moving the project forward for school wide recycling, composting and battery collection. The Green Team will also meet with Highland Secondary’s Eco Team in 2010 to collaborate their efforts and share strategies. I’ll work with these clubs to help prepare them for presenting to other secondary, middle and elementary schools in SD71 and SD72. By the end of the New Year hopefully every school will be involved in this incredible Power Of R movement. Here is what the Green Team teacher sponsor Wayne Demerse had to say about the day: “I am still buzzing from the enthusiasm Zac shared with me and my students at Carihi today. Zac spoke to my Social Studies 10 and 11 classes as well as to our Green Team at lunch. These students are now going to expand our composting plan to include the entire school. I have committed to walking to school 3 days per week and several students have expressed a willingness to take on similar challenges--all due to Zac's well paced and engaging presentations. Thanks for that, Zac!” Get your school involved in The Power Of R movement by booking a presentation or workshop by emailing me at powerofr@gmail.com today. ![]() Highland’s Eco Team has accomplished another major environmental move in Comox. The team has been busy working with Comox Town Council to green light a blue box program at Highland. Their enthusiasm was shared by the council who decided to implement blue box recycling pick up at every school in the coming year. Thousands of pounds of non-recycled waste have been traveling to the landfill each week from Comox schools. Now that waste stream will be severely depleted thanks in part to Highland Eco Team’s political action. Courtenay City Council is now looking at a budget for a similar move in Courtenay schools. It’s likely this will happen but your support is always helpful. The kids can’t run this town by themselves. Carihi High in SD72 is making plans to put pressure on Campbell River’s council to expand the initiative to district schools. I’m really happy to see all of the spin off happening in both districts for obvious reasons but I’m even more ecstatic to see youth unlocking and engaging their community on a political level. They can’t vote but they can change the world. Congratulations Highland Eco Team. | AuthorZac Whyte is a Waste Reduction Educator for Comox Strathcona Waste Management. Zac takes small steps each day to reduce his environmental footprint. ArchivesFebruary 2012 CategoriesAll |
CSWM Youth Waste Reduction Education by Zac Whyte and Gayle Bates