Friday, November 1Maximizing our Collective Impact

Tag: #editionnine

50s Style Eco-Advertisements!
Art & Multimedia

50s Style Eco-Advertisements!

By Laila Kostorowski For my final project in Environmental Science, I decided to put my graphic art skills to work. In this project, I aimed to create vintage advertisements and posters to comment on how much sooner we should have addressed environmental issues. This is an ad for an electric car. I hoped to convey the power of advertising and American consumerism. I intended for this piece to be more like a poster concerning the rising temperature at the poles. This is also a poster but a bit more specific than the others. Large-scale deforestation of the Amazon Rainforest began in the 1960s and is still in progress; this truly is an issue that could (and should) have been managed decades ago.
Dear people who care: 4th Grade Student’s Call to Act
Community News & Policy

Dear people who care: 4th Grade Student’s Call to Act

By Krish Kubba Dear people who care about the environment, Polar bears are going extinct. That’s the simple explanation. There are too many greenhouse gasses in the world, the polar ice caps are melting, and 36.4 billion tons of carbon dioxide will not disappear while you sit around watching TV and eating Doritos. The faster we ruin the planet, the faster it will die. There are many ways to help.  All of you have probably heard about polar bears going extinct because of climate change but not a lot of people know why. Greenhouse gasses are the reason. Most of the people reading this have probably heard of greenhouse gasses. But do any of you actually know what they are and how they work? Greenhouse gasses are actually good for the planet, but you know the quote you can have t...
Mountain, Appalachian: A Short Story
Notes From the Editors

Mountain, Appalachian: A Short Story

By Lane Worthing Forward Throughout Environmental Science this year, we have learned so much about the fundamental forces of nature that govern our world and how humans have affected them. In my final project, I wanted to discuss some of the most interesting and important topics we learned about, but from a slightly different perspective, so I wrote from the perspective of a mountain (that’s why some information is in footnotes - it’s relevant, but I didn’t think a mountain would know or care about the obscure terms we’ve come up with for things like the Laurentide Ice Sheet, for instance).  Overall, I wanted to convey the sense that the history of the natural world goes back so much farther and is so much bigger than human history, yet we are still drastically changing so m...
Shifting Biomes, Shifting Minds
Literature

Shifting Biomes, Shifting Minds

By Rhianna Searle Our climate changes and our society stagnates. We’ve grown  among deciduous forests, but the biomes are shifting. So  why  aren’t  we? Dirt is a derogatory word– don’t you see! How can we elevate  the ground we walk on? Get down in it, Go out and touch it: the turtles with scarred red geometry the frozen pond with spider cracks the native oaks, fathers of the forest. This is how you translate dirt into soil. This is how you personify the pie charts. This is how you shift the science into the streets. This is how you peel the world off the page and into action.
The Climate Crisis is an Adult Issue–– So Why Have We Turned to Youth?
Notes From the Editors

The Climate Crisis is an Adult Issue–– So Why Have We Turned to Youth?

By Kendra Wang Our world is slowly dying. Our Arctic Sea Ice Extent has been down 13 percent since 1979 (NASA, 2022). A report by the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) revealed that all polar bears could be gone by 2100 (BBC, 2020). California forest fires have forcefully evicted thousands of people. The pandemic has rendered up to 7,200 tons of medical waste every day (MIT, 2021).  And amidst all the chaos, the burden to “fix” the world falls upon the shoulders of our next generation: teens. Greta Thunberg’s protest in 2018 urged students to leave school every Friday to stand their ground against climate change. Strikes for climate change make a statement. We tell the world that youth want change, that we are willing to do whatever it takes. And yet, many of us are merely ...