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Unified Education Strategy Grants

Mare Island Technology Academy

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Grantee Information

Mare Island Technology Academy (MIT) is a community-based nonprofit organization that operates Mare Island Technology Academy Middle School, a public charter school in Solano County. MIT participated in the Unified Education Strategy (UES) grant program to modify its current waste management practices with the ultimate goal of becoming a service-learning environmental school. With the UES grant, MIT set out to establish the infrastructure for a unified approach to environmental education instructional strategies and waste management practices through the following program:

  • Students conducted a waste audit to understand their school’s waste stream in order to determine effective waste diversion practices that will help conserve natural resources.

Additionally, MIT created an interdisciplinary, multifaceted set of lessons to perform a comparative study of urban sanitation before and after the 20th century, including the following:

  • History-social science content standards were addressed through the exploration of sanitary conditions as a contributing factor to the spread of disease in regions representing centers of commerce, such as the spread of the bubonic plague in medieval Europe and the spread of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) throughout the world in the 21st Century.
  • Students applied their knowledge of sanitation and issues associated with the spread of disease to their own school site by conducting an audit of their school’s waste stream.
  • Data collected from the waste audit was analyzed and interpreted through basic computations, measurements, percentages, and calculation of volumes.
  • Students acquired knowledge of scientific concepts regarding renewable and nonrenewable natural resources.
  • English-language arts standards were applied through various lessons.
  • Students made a Power Point slide show presentation to MIT’s Board of Directors and recommended ways to improve the school’s infrastructure regarding waste diversion practices.

MIT participated in year one of the UES grant program and intends to sustain waste diversion efforts by continuing to incorporate sustainable practices as part of the school culture. The school intends to serve as a model conservation school for the City of Vallejo.

Opportunities and Obstacles

  • The benefits of participating in this program were beyond academics. As students learned waste management concepts, they began to think about materials used on campus and the flow of materials off of the campus.
  • Implementing reduction efforts was viewed by the school administration as a means for reducing garbage and recycling related costs.
  • Students’ environmental stewardship increased in their daily living at home and school.
  • Participating in this program added to the school's identity as they strive to be an “environmental” school.
  • Establish a structure for communication and increase frequency of meetings. A strong communication system provides the team opportunities to discuss program information and coordinate program efforts.
  • Ensure reading materials are grade-level appropriate.

Diversion Successes

  • Data collected from the school’s waste audit showed discrete areas for improving diversion. The administrators saw no obstacles in fulfilling the student’s recommendations.
  • Partnerships were formed with the local recycling center personnel, a local farm, and, to some extent, the local waste hauling company. The school plans to continue and extend these partnerships as MIT’s waste diversion efforts continue.
  • MIT’s school board has made waste diversion and conservation a priority, and the administrators feel they have the board’s full support. There are opportunities for energy, water and green building conservation efforts to be implemented in future years.

Lessons Created

Example of one lesson: 7th Grade, History and Social Science--Reading material and activities were provided to students so that they could describe how sanitary conditions in Medieval Europe contributed to the spread of the Bubonic Plague.

Partnerships

Program Contacts

CIWMB Office of Education and the Environment
k12edu@ciwmb.ca.gov
(916) 341-6769
Mare Island Technology Academy
staff@mitacademy.org
(707) 552-6482
CIWMB Office of Local Assistance
dplaola@ciwmb.ca.gov
(916) 341-6199
 

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Last updated: November 01, 2007


Office of Education and the Environment http://www.ciwmb.ca.gov/Schools/
Contact: EEI@calepa.ca.gov (916) 341-6769