Saturday, November 10, 2012

The Worms Have Arrived!

My Writing Lab class has taken on the creation of a school-wide composting program.  A few weeks ago, Kate Carney from Keep Greater Milwaukee Beautiful visited our classroom to teach us more about composting.  After her visit, students wrote a letter to Sweet Water Organics to ask for a donation of red wigglers to help us give indoor vermicomposting a shot.  On Friday, Kate came back with the worms!  Students had a contest to see which group could write the best morning announcement to educate our peers about the benefits of composting.  One of the things we were surprised to learn is that every American throws away an average of five pounds of garbage a day.

MSL students and teachers:   Listen to the announcements to hear when we'll be collecting leftover fruits and vegetables from Lunch D to give to the worms.  Also, we plan to sell our composting product at Festival of Nations on March 7th.


Here are some pictures from our work on Friday:

Working on advertising our project
Networking with teachers to get coffee grounds
Leaves=worm food!


The worms will also eat newspaper and paper bags.


For indoor composting, you want the mix to be 75% brown.
Back from raking


There they are!
Making our worms a home


Coffee ground success!
Getting out the last of our worms
Almost done!

Class photo!

The compost bin in place in the greenhouse over a drain surrounded by bags of leaves!

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Fifth Hour Artistically Presents...The Great Gatsby

In American Authors, students were assigned to translate The Great Gatsby into an art project.  They had the options to draw a chapter, scene, symbol, setting, or character.  One student chose to write a poem and one chose to write a screenplay of Chapter One.  We will save our creations for our Festival of Nations project in March when we present Midnight in Paris, focused on Paris in the 1920s and inspired by the Woody Allen film.