written skit on environment
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The Garbage Diet: A Skit(Adapted from Wrap Sessions: Town of Islip Recycling CurriculumDept of Environmental Control, Town of Islip, NY) Back to Trash Goes To SchoolGRADE LEVELS: 4-6 SUBJECT AREAS: social studies CONCEPT: We all can work to reduce the amount of waste we produce. OBJECTIVE: To help students to think of lifestyle changes that would produce less waste. MATERIALS: table and chairs, garbage can, and old radio KEYWORDS: reduce, reuse PROCEDURE:CAST1) Mother - 42 years old, Mrs. Linda Green, Engineer
2) Father - 42 years old, Mr. Ken Green, Teacher
3) Teenager - 16 years old, Maria Green
4) Elementary school-age child - 8 years old, Joseph Green
5) Neighbor - Mrs Gray
6) Relative - Aunt Alice, from New Jersey
7) Grandparent - Grandma (or Grandpa) 70 years old
8) Dawn (Maria's friend) - 16 years old
9) Narrator BACKGROUND INFORMATION MOTHER: Mrs. Green works as an engineer. She works hard at her job because she wants her family to have things. She leaves home about 7 a.m. each day and returns about 6 p.m. She commutes to her job. FATHER: Mr. Green works as a teacher. He leaves home about 7:30 a.m. and returns about 3:30 p.m. Then he starts to cook dinner and do other household chores. MARIA: High School student. Very popular. Does well in school. JOSEPH: Third grade student. Very interested in the environment, which he is now learning about in school. GRANDMOTHER: Born in 1918. She has seen many changes. When she was born there was no TV or radio and almost no one owned a car.THE PLAY NARRATOR: The play begins with Mr. & Mrs. Green, Maria, and Joseph sitting around the table eating dinner.MR. GREEN: What did you do in school today, Joseph?JOSEPH: Well, we learned about garbage, Dad.MR. GREEN: Garbage? Are you kidding? I don't think that's a subject for the dinner table, Joseph.JOSEPH: Oh, but it is. Mrs. Driscoll says each person makes 3-4 pounds of garbage everyday. For homework she told us to make a list of some of the things in our garbage.MARIA: I don't make four pounds of garbage a day.JOSEPH: Mrs. Driscoll says teenagers make more than four pounds of garbage a day.MARIA: I don't believe that. I'll bet you make more garbage than I do.JOSEPH: Bet I don't.MRS. GREEN: Why don't you have a contest to see who can make the least amount of garbage in a week?JOSEPH: We could all do it.JOSEPH: Could we Dad? Could we? I could write about it and get extra credit.MR. GREEN: Well, OK, but just for a week.MRS. GREEN: I suggest that instead of a contest we make it a family project. OK? Let's separate things that get thrown out from things that could be reduced, re-used, or recycled.JOSEPH: That will reduce the amount of trash that goes to the landfill, Mom!MRS. GREEN: Is everyone agreed?EVERYONE: "OK"NARRATOR: It's now a quarter to seven in the morning. Maria and Joseph are eating breakfast.JOSEPH: Now remember, Maria, newspaper in one pile, then there are cans for deposit, no-deposit cans, bottles for deposit, no-deposit bottles, food scraps, plastic...
MARIA: I can't remember all that. Who cares about garbage anyway. I'm too busy.JOSEPH: It's important, Maria. If we don't do something about the garbage, we're going to have serious problems.MARIA: Like what?JOSEPH: For one thing, we won't have any place to put it!
For another, it really hurts the water.MARIA: That's not my problem. Is it?MRS. GREEN: Hey kids - it's getting late. Joseph your lunch is on the counter.JOSEPH: But Mom, you used plastic. Plastic is not recyclable.MRS. GREEN: Joseph, what should we do?JOSEPH: Maybe I'll save this clean plastic bag and re-use it tomorrow. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *NARRATOR: It is now evening. Grandmother, Aunt Alice (from New Jersey), and a neighbor have come to visit.AUNT ALICE: I hear you folks are going on a garbage diet.MRS. GREEN: Yes, but it's so much extra work.GRANDMOTHER: Well, this might surprise you, but when I was a child we had no garbage at all.MARIA: No garbage? How come Grandma?GRANDMOTHER: Well, there was just about no plastic at all, and bottles and cans were pretty scarce too.MRS. GREEN: What about spoiled leftovers or scraps? Who collected that?GRANDMA: Well no one did. We just put it in a compost pile.NEIGHBOR: I've got one of those. I just throw the food in a bin in the corner of my backyard. Then later, I put it on my flowers. Sure makes them grow.MRS. GREEN: I don't want a smelly pile of food rotting in my backyard.NEIGHBOR: It doesn't smell as long as someone remembers to "TURN" it with a shovel every month, or more often if you have time.MARIA: But that's work!GRANDMA: Well, Maria, most worthwhile things do involve some work. But the work has to be shared. For example, your parents work away from home all day so it might be up to the rest of you to help out.NEIGHBOR: Here in our community recycling's easy. All you need are two pails. One for things that can be recycled, the other for things that cannot.
2) Father - 42 years old, Mr. Ken Green, Teacher
3) Teenager - 16 years old, Maria Green
4) Elementary school-age child - 8 years old, Joseph Green
5) Neighbor - Mrs Gray
6) Relative - Aunt Alice, from New Jersey
7) Grandparent - Grandma (or Grandpa) 70 years old
8) Dawn (Maria's friend) - 16 years old
9) Narrator BACKGROUND INFORMATION MOTHER: Mrs. Green works as an engineer. She works hard at her job because she wants her family to have things. She leaves home about 7 a.m. each day and returns about 6 p.m. She commutes to her job. FATHER: Mr. Green works as a teacher. He leaves home about 7:30 a.m. and returns about 3:30 p.m. Then he starts to cook dinner and do other household chores. MARIA: High School student. Very popular. Does well in school. JOSEPH: Third grade student. Very interested in the environment, which he is now learning about in school. GRANDMOTHER: Born in 1918. She has seen many changes. When she was born there was no TV or radio and almost no one owned a car.THE PLAY NARRATOR: The play begins with Mr. & Mrs. Green, Maria, and Joseph sitting around the table eating dinner.MR. GREEN: What did you do in school today, Joseph?JOSEPH: Well, we learned about garbage, Dad.MR. GREEN: Garbage? Are you kidding? I don't think that's a subject for the dinner table, Joseph.JOSEPH: Oh, but it is. Mrs. Driscoll says each person makes 3-4 pounds of garbage everyday. For homework she told us to make a list of some of the things in our garbage.MARIA: I don't make four pounds of garbage a day.JOSEPH: Mrs. Driscoll says teenagers make more than four pounds of garbage a day.MARIA: I don't believe that. I'll bet you make more garbage than I do.JOSEPH: Bet I don't.MRS. GREEN: Why don't you have a contest to see who can make the least amount of garbage in a week?JOSEPH: We could all do it.JOSEPH: Could we Dad? Could we? I could write about it and get extra credit.MR. GREEN: Well, OK, but just for a week.MRS. GREEN: I suggest that instead of a contest we make it a family project. OK? Let's separate things that get thrown out from things that could be reduced, re-used, or recycled.JOSEPH: That will reduce the amount of trash that goes to the landfill, Mom!MRS. GREEN: Is everyone agreed?EVERYONE: "OK"NARRATOR: It's now a quarter to seven in the morning. Maria and Joseph are eating breakfast.JOSEPH: Now remember, Maria, newspaper in one pile, then there are cans for deposit, no-deposit cans, bottles for deposit, no-deposit bottles, food scraps, plastic...
MARIA: I can't remember all that. Who cares about garbage anyway. I'm too busy.JOSEPH: It's important, Maria. If we don't do something about the garbage, we're going to have serious problems.MARIA: Like what?JOSEPH: For one thing, we won't have any place to put it!
For another, it really hurts the water.MARIA: That's not my problem. Is it?MRS. GREEN: Hey kids - it's getting late. Joseph your lunch is on the counter.JOSEPH: But Mom, you used plastic. Plastic is not recyclable.MRS. GREEN: Joseph, what should we do?JOSEPH: Maybe I'll save this clean plastic bag and re-use it tomorrow. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *NARRATOR: It is now evening. Grandmother, Aunt Alice (from New Jersey), and a neighbor have come to visit.AUNT ALICE: I hear you folks are going on a garbage diet.MRS. GREEN: Yes, but it's so much extra work.GRANDMOTHER: Well, this might surprise you, but when I was a child we had no garbage at all.MARIA: No garbage? How come Grandma?GRANDMOTHER: Well, there was just about no plastic at all, and bottles and cans were pretty scarce too.MRS. GREEN: What about spoiled leftovers or scraps? Who collected that?GRANDMA: Well no one did. We just put it in a compost pile.NEIGHBOR: I've got one of those. I just throw the food in a bin in the corner of my backyard. Then later, I put it on my flowers. Sure makes them grow.MRS. GREEN: I don't want a smelly pile of food rotting in my backyard.NEIGHBOR: It doesn't smell as long as someone remembers to "TURN" it with a shovel every month, or more often if you have time.MARIA: But that's work!GRANDMA: Well, Maria, most worthwhile things do involve some work. But the work has to be shared. For example, your parents work away from home all day so it might be up to the rest of you to help out.NEIGHBOR: Here in our community recycling's easy. All you need are two pails. One for things that can be recycled, the other for things that cannot.
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