ENVIRONMENT
Use our materials to understand how the choices we make impact our world.

Photograph by Ildar Sagdejev, courtesy Wikimedia
Discussion Ideas
- Review the findings about how people recycle, and then read our activity “Perils of Plastic.” Follow steps 2-4 of the activity—collect recyclable trash for a week. Evaluate the recyclable material at the end of the week.
- Are people recycling torn paper?
- Are people recycling dented cans, broken bottles, or smashed plastics?
- Conduct the same “Perils of Plastic” exercise with a class or other group that has not read or listened to the NPR article. Evaluate the trash collected by this group, and compare it to the first. Is their recyclable material in different shape?
- The researcher profiled in the NPR article thinks that “the first step in changing these habits is to be aware of our bias about usefulness.” Do you agree?
- Why do you think people are more likely to “trash” broken or dented recyclable materials?
- We sometimes make unfair, inaccurate associations. The language in “Perils of Plastic,” for example, encourages people to bring in “clean” trash only. We sometimes associate “clean” with “whole and undamaged.”
- As the researchers in the NPR article say, we sometimes associate “trash” with “used-up” and “recyclable” with “still useful in its present form.” This is untrue: Most plastics, paper, and metals will be radically altered in the recycling process.
- Shards of glass are just as recyclable as whole bottles—check out this GIF set to see how this recycling works.
- Whole, torn, crumbled, and shredded paper all goes to the same paper mill to be recycled. Follow the “paper trail” with this video.
- Plastics are all eventually broken down and melted to remove dirt and grime. Watch this video on how plastic bags are recycled.
- All aluminum is crushed before being reprocessed. Watch “the story of aluminum recycling” here.
When recycling any waste materials, we should know that the every waste material collected needs to be recycled, whether be it be whole electronic waste or be it bits of paper or plastic wrappers, discriminating will never help to the cause of waste recycling process.
Valuing a product is very important.
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