Title: Yorkshire
1 Yorkshire Humberside Waste Education
Feasibility study Recycle North - Summer
Meeting - 20th July 2006
2Introduction
- A waste education feasibility study for the
Yorkshire Humber region - Survey of current waste education provision in
the region - Development of a regional waste education
framework - Main focus on school-based waste education.
- Work carried out by Waste Watch and Save Waste
Prosper (SWAP) for - Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council (lead
authority) - Yorkshire Forward
- Yorkshire Humber ESD Co-ordinator
- North Yorkshire County Council.
- Funded by the WIP Regional Support Fund
3The scoping study
- Designed to
- Provide an audit of waste education work in the
region - Evaluate programmes against Key Success
Indicators - Provide an evaluation of the regions waste
education in comparison to that in other parts of
the UK - Highlight best practice within the region
- Identify gaps in provision
- Provide recommendations for improvement
4Initial research
- Collation of information on known waste education
providers - Local authority waste management departments
- Local education authorities
- Known members of waste education networks
- Other known voluntary sector organisations
businesses - Structured telephone interviews
- Aims type of education programme being
delivered - Target groups geographical range
- Curriculum links
- Recycling and composting provision to schools
- Monitoring evaluation
- Funding
- Links to other providers
5Case studies
- 4 selected providers
- North East Lincolnshire CD ROM resource
- Rockware Glass Education Centre site based
resource - Calderdale Council incentive scheme
- North Yorkshire Schools Waste Action Club
schools waste - 3 elements
- Face to face interviews
- Feedback from schools
- Feedback from parents
6Key Success Indicators
- Links to the curriculum
- Involvement of the school community
- Provision of recycling facilities to schools
- Follow up support for schools
- Monitoring evaluation
- Partnership working links to strategies
7Waste education providers
- Sixty one organisations were initially identified
as potential waste education providers. - Of these, 32 answered yes to the question, Do
you deliver waste education in activities to
schools in the Yorkshire and Humber region? - 28 of these were able to answer the questionnaire
in full it is mainly on these that the report
was based.
8Types of providers
9Distribution capacity
- Concentration of waste education providers in the
main cities and large towns, in particular Leeds,
Bradford and Doncaster. - Provision in more rural areas more limited and,
where it exists, is thinly spread. - Only two waste education providers focussed
solely on waste education with the remaining 26
having other areas of responsibility. - Only 7 of the providers employed more than one
full time member of staff on the delivery of
waste education with a further 6 having just one
full time staff member delivering waste
education.
10Aims of providers
11Type of activities
12Curriculum areas
- Most common curriculum areas to which waste
education work is linked are - Geography
- Citizenship
- Science
- Fewer (but still significant) links to
- Maths/numeracy
- PHSE
- Design technology
- Art
- 7 providers said that their work related to all
areas of the curriculum.
13Age groups
14Provision of school recycling facilities
- 17 out of 27 waste education providers
interviewed were able to provide schools with
recycling facilities, either themselves or
through a third party. - The most common material collected was paper (15
organisations). - Other relatively common materials were cans (7
providers) glass (6 providers) - Fewer than 5 providers interviewed were able to
collect any of the following card, plastic,
textiles, shoes, yellow pages, inkjet cartridges
and mobile phones.
15Monitoring evaluation
16M E in Waste Watch projects
- North Yorkshire Schools Waste Action Club
- Over past two years comparisons of initial and
repeat waste audits have shown cuts in school
waste of up to 82 with an average reduction of
around 40 - Taking Home Action on Waste (Rotherham)
- On average, children know 4 to 5 ½ times more at
the end of the programme than they did at the
beginning - Set out rate increased by up to 16 with an
average increase of 6 - Paper collected for recycling increased by up to
36 with an average increase of c.15 - Blue box tonnage increased by up to 33 with an
average increase of c. 11 - Residual waste fallen by between 3 and 20 with
an average decrease of c. 10
17Funding sources
18Conclusions the regional picture
- Wide variety of provision, particularly from
voluntary sector. - Some best practice work which could be showcased
nationally. - No truly regional projects but some work across
large part of area. - Coverage of schools across different parts of the
region is variable. - Effective partnerships between LAs and vol sector
in some areas. - Involvement and interest shown by LEAs is very
limited. - Concrete evidence of links to local waste
strategies is limited. Links to local education
strategies are even less frequent. There is also
limited linkage to regional ESD work.
19Conclusions project aims delivery
- Most projects have the primary aim of increasing
recycling and this is more targeted at home waste
than it is at school waste. - Provision of recycling facilities to schools is
generally good but there is scope to take a
greater range of materials and to expand
provision in more rural areas where schools might
act as recycling centres for their local
communities. - Although a number of projects focus on reuse and
reduction as well as on recycling, few embrace
broader aspects of sustainable consumption and
this, at least in part, relates to the nature of
currently available funding. - Although there are a few exceptions, monitoring
of the impact of waste education delivery on both
school and home waste is very limited tends to
be restricted to feedback from school staff.
20Conclusions - work with schools
- Significantly more waste education work takes
place in primary schools than in secondary
schools. - Main curriculum areas into which waste education
in the region is currently linked are Geography
and Citizenship. - Most providers use a range of methods to educate
about waste e.g. assemblies, class-based work and
site visits. - Because funding and staffing is limited, there is
a tension between providing intensive work with a
relatively small number of schools and relatively
superficial work with a larger number of schools. - For similar reasons, follow up support for
schools is also limited. Much is done on an ad
hoc basis with a need for a more planned approach.
21Conclusions networking, training support
- With the exception of the CRN regional waste
education network, partnership links are
generally local rather than regional in nature. - Training and support for practitioners is
available but, although there has been some
uptake, this has been somewhat limited. - Regional and national networks are available but
membership of these by organisations active in
waste education within the region is limited. - Teacher training is provided by a significant
number of providers but this is piecemeal with
each organisation developing their own training.
22Conclusions - funding
- In keeping with the general picture across the
UK, current availability of funding for waste
education is limited. Much of it is short-term
and this can have detrimental effects on project
stability, staff retention and opportunities for
planned development. - The loss of LTCS funding for waste education
means that more funding comes from local
authorities than any other source. Although this
funding is welcome, it can have restricted aims
and limit the capacity of projects to develop
work in broader areas relating to sustainable
consumption.
23Aims objectives for a regional waste education
framework
- Any regional framework for the Yorkshire Humber
region needs to - support and strengthen existing projects
- strengthen partnerships and networks across the
region - enable the sharing of the existing best practice
within the region - facilitate further development of waste education
in the region, either through the new projects or
the development of existing work, thereby
addressing some of the gaps in provision that
exist - allow the regions waste educators to learn from
work elsewhere in the UK and provide a means by
which to showcase best practice work in the
region to other parts of the UK
24Option 1 direct delivery
- What would it involve?
- Direct education officer delivery to schools
- 4 waste education officers plus centrally placed
co-ordinator - Extra bodies to be deployed on request from local
providers - Standard programmes for delivery across region
- Follow up telephone support termly newsletter
-
- Pros
- Would help to address currently uneven provision
across region - Exemplar programmes standardised delivery
across region - Cons
- Risk of treading on toes of existing providers
- Programmes insufficiently local
- Monitoring and evaluation would be limited
25Option 2 support for wasteeducation providers
- What would it involve?
- Network led by co-ordinator build on existing
CRN led network - Termly network meeting with a specific theme
- Link to national waste education network
- Training and support to existing and potential
providers - Pros
- Capacity building training sharing of good
practice - Flexibility to be responsive to needs
- Links to national picture
- Cons
- Doesnt create additional capacity i.e. doesnt
work in schools
26Option 3 teacher training
- What would it involve?
- CPD i.e. training of practicing teachers
- 2 officers flexibility to deliver individually
or together - Sustainable waste management at school
Composting at school - Comprehensive resource pack for all teachers
attending courses - Pros
- Builds capacity amongst teachers there for the
long term - Could be used to address imbalance in provision
across region - Relatively cost effective
- Cons
- Opportunities to standardise what is delivered to
children is limited - Limited opportunities for monitoring evaluation
27Option 4 a regional resource
- What would it involve?
- Regional waste education toolkit for schools
- Background info how to audit action plan
lesson plans resources - Regional flavour with regional case studies plus
local info at back - Made available to schools through local
authorities other providers - Pros
- Common element across region recognisable
regional brand - Would build capacity amongst teachers
- Goes some way to addressing imbalance of
provision - Cons
- Resources only fully effective alongside other
support/training - Printed toolkits can collect dust and go out of
date quickly - Not sure how much a web-based toolkit would be
used - Monitoring of impact would be difficult
28Recommended regional framework
- Integrate these four elements.
- Employ
- a regional waste education co-ordinator
- supporting waste education officer.
- In first year
- Continuation development of existing regional
network - Six training courses for waste educators
- 6 teacher training days total 90 delegates
- Develop produce 500 copies of regional toolkit
- Direct delivery of a basic waste education
programme to up to 10 schools in areas with
no/limited existing provision