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Kuranui School

Environment
Group
Our Journey
Presented by: Bronlee, Bailey,
Dylan, Samuel, Madison.

Thank You
Thank you for giving Kuranui School the privilege
of having a community recycling centre so we can
reduce and reuse.
We will endeavour to continue to educate families
and the community about the need to reduce,
eruse and recycle for the sustainability of our local
environment.
The paper and cardboard
rubbish generated at our
school per week
Why recycling is important?
Recycling is important because the things we use
are made from certain things from the earth
Plastic is made from oil
Aluminium cans are made from a rock called
Bauxite from Australia
Tin cans (steel) is made from black sand (iron ore)
Paper/cardboard is made from trees
Glass is made from white sand (silica)
Me and my Environment 2009.
During this unit of work at our school we looked at
ways to enhance our school environment and to
make the environment a pleasurable place to be.
Room 1 created a vegetable garden, Room 3
cleaned up horse paddock and made plans for an
edible orchard and Room 5 created the fernery.
In 2009 we created a vision map and the following is our journey toward
achieving our Silver Enviro-Schools Award.
What has been
achieved since
the vision map
was created in
2009?
Play Area:

The hole on the spider-web has been fixed.
We have stronger sandpit toys.
The sandpit has been fixed.
We have a new tyre swings in the junior
playground.
We have a trampoline with a net around it.

Field:
We have portable soccer nets.
We have a volley ball net.
We have a tunnel under the fort.

Concrete Areas:
o We have new concrete markings.

Energy:
We have a pool cover to help keep the pool
warmer and stop the water evaporating.

Lunch Area/Seating:
We have picnic tables for eating at.
We have shade sails to eat and relax under.



Fencing:
We have a fence around the playground
area to keep the balls out of the river.
We have a bus gate.
Buildings & Grounds:
We have a sick-bay for sick children.

Beautification:
We have had some murals painted in the
school on the target wall.
We have a worm farm.
We have lids on the recycling bins.
We have rubbish free lunchboxes.

Creatures:
We have a bird table.
Planted more native trees to atract native birds.
back to our native area.

Zero Waste:
Gardens:

We have replanted some of the gardens.
We have extended the vegetable gardens.
We have created a tyre garden.
We have planted strawberries.
We have planted more native trees.
We have planted fruit trees.

We have even done an awesome project
that wasnt on the vision map.
Stream Planting
Why?
To help keep the water clean.
To stop landslides.
To prevent pollution.
Stream Planting (2011)
In 2011 willow trees that were blocking the
Waiomou Stream behind our school were
removed, and the students of Kuranui School
planted new native trees .
Cleaning up the banks of Waiomou
Stream.
Planting 2011
Our Edible Orchard 2011.
After much designing and planning in 2010 and
Mrs Jones efforts to find funding for our plans
from Fonterra, we started to build our edible
orchards with help from our teachers, parents and
a student form Waikato University.
Now it is completed and we are beginning to see
some fruit forming on our growing trees and
plants.
Stream planting (2012)
In 2012 we planted another section of the Waiomou
Stream river bank.
The plants help the river stay clean by holding the bank
together.
Plants fliter the phosphates that are in the fertilisers
used on the surrounding paddocks to our school.

Learning with Rien.
Rein, from Environment Waikato, helps us with
our planting.
He taught us about were the streams and rivers
lead in our catchment.
He taught us about important places and land
marks in our local area.
Rein is great and teachs us heaps of important
information about the water in our area.
Stream planting (2013)
Once again the students, friends and parents of
Kuranui School tackled another section of our
stream boundary to plant.
We enjoyed sharing our growing knowledge and
understanding of planting and stream protection
with the new or younger members of our school.
Stream Planting 2013
Our school commitment to
Community planting programmes.
Each year Kuranui school children from Room 5
support planting programmes undertaken by both
The S.W.D.C. and Environment Waikato. Students
help to plant at the Te Waihou Walkway and at
Lake Okoroire.
Our Journey has not ended!
Thank you for supporting the development of
learning around the protection and sustainability
of our environment for future generations!
Together we can achieve more .

Thanks for Helping Us
!!!!

Kuranui School

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