Throughout the year we have encouraged the school community to turn their eating down by 1 degree, we have raised awareness of this through assemblies, cut your carbon month and holding power down days. Our eco council often look at energy sparks data and meet with our premises officer to ensure that the heating only needs to be on when necessary. Within school sustainability policy we have said: In order to maintain suitable classroom temperatures, we will:
● maintain classroom temperatures of no higher than 18°C
● maintain hall and corridor temperatures of no higher than 15°C
● maintain a temperature no higher than 21°C in the library and infrequently used rooms
● install thermostatic controls for radiators so that they can be turned down or off if a room is too hot
Activity description
Get informed
Scientists are now expecting that we will be facing a global warming of 1.5 degrees Celsius in the next 8-10 years. What this means is that since we started large scale burning of fossil fuels during the Industrial Revolution over 200 years ago, the average temperature of the climate has increased by 1.5 degrees Celsius.
This will mean:
more heatwaves
more heavy rain
more droughts
ecosystem loss on land and in the sea
increased flooding
sea level rise
loss of polar ice
spread of infectious diseases
1.5 degrees of global warming will means big changes to our planet, but the alternative - 2-4 degrees of warming - will be worse. We can avoid this.
We need to make changes to the way we live our lives. Some of these might seem too big to accomplish straightaway but we can all start by doing something small in our schools and homes. Did you know that nearly a third of the UK’s greenhouse gas emissions come from our homes. It will be almost impossible to meet our national target of cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 80% without reducing our home energy use.
Not only this - turning down your thermostat 1 degree would save your household money - about 10% of the annual energy bill, which would be around £60 in the UK. In this campaign you will try to persuade families in your school community to turn down their thermostats one degree. Spread the word
How will you make sure that everyone in the school community knows about your campaign? You can tell other pupils in an assembly but how will you get the message home to families? You could:
write a persuasive letter to send home to parents
write an article for the school newsletter
put something on the school website
put posters up around the school, on the school gates as well as inside the school
Keep track of the changes
How do you know the impact you've made? You may want to encourage families to sign a pledge to turn down their thermostats. Why not run a competition between classes to see which class can have the most families pledge? Can you set a target for the whole school to get 25% of families signed up. 50%? 100%? As a next phase, why not encourage some families to drop their thermostat 2 degrees! Go for it!
Celebrate
Make sure you share the great steps that your families are taking. Keep a running tally of how many families are signing up. Make sure this is visible to the whole school - put a poster in the school reception or by the school gate or make sure to put it in your weekly newsletter to encourage more families to join in!
If you're part of a group of schools or MAT, make sure you tell all the other schools about your challenge. You could even run it as an inter-trust challenge to see which schools get most families pledging.
Why not even tell the local newspaper what you're doing - to encourage other people in your community to take this action too.
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