NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 61 to 75 of 129 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Cutter-Mackenzie, Amy – Journal of Environmental Education, 2010
The Waste Wise Schools program has a longstanding history in Australia. It is an action-based program that encourages schools to move toward zero waste through their curriculum and operating practices. This article provides a review of the program, finding that it has had notable success in reducing schools' waste through a "reduce, reuse,…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Program Evaluation, Foreign Countries, Water
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Ne´el, Bastien; Cardoso, Catia; Perret, Didier; Bakker, Eric – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
A small-scale wastewater cleaning plant is described that includes the key physical pretreatment steps followed by the chemical treatment of mud by flocculation. Water, clay particles, and riverside deposits mimicked odorless wastewater. After a demonstration of the optimization step, the flocculation process was carried out with iron(III)…
Descriptors: Water Quality, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Wastes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Tsurusaki, Blakely K.; Anderson, Charles W. – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2010
This research draws on developments in educational research where "learning progressions" are emerging as a strategy for synthesizing research on science learning and applying that research to policy and practice, and advances in the natural sciences, where "interdisciplinary research on coupled human and natural systems" has become increasingly…
Descriptors: Science and Society, Relevance (Education), Science Curriculum, Elementary Secondary Education
Ramey, Alice – Occupational Outlook Quarterly, 2009
Green is often used as a synonym for environmental or ecological, especially as it relates to products and activities aimed at minimizing damage to the planet. Scientists and engineers have long had important roles in the environmental movement. Their expertise is focused on a variety of issues, including increasing energy efficiency, improving…
Descriptors: Water Quality, Sanitation, Environmental Education, Energy Conservation
Clarkson, W. W.; And Others – 1978
This module examines the basic properties of soil which have an influence on the success of land treatment of wastes. These relevant properties include soil texture, soil structure, permeability, infiltration, available water capacity, and cation exchange capacity. Biological, chemical and physical mechanisms work to remove and renovate wastes…
Descriptors: Biology, Chemistry, Environment, Instructional Materials
Clarkson, W. W.; And Others – 1978
This module enumerates the benefits to be derived from cropping at a waste application site and criteria to be used in selecting a crop for use in a particular situation. Following basic discussions of the requirements of various crops for water, soil-plant-air moisture potentials, crop water tolerance, nutrient removals by various crops, and…
Descriptors: Agriculture, Environment, Field Crops, Land Use
SCHOONOVER, ROBERT A. – 1967
THIS PUBLICATION DISCUSSES IN DEPTH THE PROBLEM OF WATER POLLUTION AS SEEN BY THE FLORIDA STATE BOARD OF HEALTH. DOMESTIC SEWAGE, INDUSTRIAL WASTES, AND ALLEVIATION ACTIVITIES OF THE STATE BOARD OF HEALTH AND COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENTS ARE DESCRIBED. SIX APPENDIXES PRESENT CORRESPONDENCE AND REPORTS REGARDING THE PROBLEM. THIS IS AN ISSUE OF…
Descriptors: Community Health Services, Health, Health Conditions, Health Services
Clarkson, W. W.; And Others – 1978
This module summarizes laws that are relevant to the land application of wastes, focusing on the applicable Federal laws and representative state regulations from different areas of the country. The module describes the 10 points of Public Law 92-500, the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, that relate to land application. It…
Descriptors: Environment, Federal Legislation, Land Use, Laws
Roach, Ronald – Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, 2005
For nearly three decades, the environmental justice movement has attracted thousands of activists, scholars and ordinary citizens to mobilize on behalf of communities that have been overburdened with hazardous waste sites, petrochemical plants, incinerators, lead contamination, polluted air and contaminated drinking water. In many cases, activists…
Descriptors: African American Community, Hazardous Materials, Environmental Education, Sanitation
US Environmental Protection Agency, 2007
Neyland Stadium, located on the University of Tennessee (UT) campus in Knoxville, is home of the UT Volunteers football team. With a seating capacity of 104,079, it is the largest football stadium in the South, and the third-largest college stadium in the country. Since 1993, the stadium has collected more than 50 tons of materials for recycling.…
Descriptors: Recycling, Programs, Recreational Facilities, State Universities
Michigan State Dept. of Commerce, Lansing. Community Planning Div. – 1970
The Highland Park environmental health plan includes the following components: Legal and administrative and programmatic relationships, planning studies, residential environment, disease vector control, water and sewage systems, sanitation, air pollution, food protection, industrial and radiological health, and solid waste facilities. (JR)
Descriptors: Administration, Environment, Environmental Education, Evaluation
Clarkson, W. W.; And Others – 1978
This module describes important criteria to use in evaluating land for waste treatment sites and tells where the necessary information for such evaluation can be obtained. Among the important criteria for evaluation are climate, land use of potential site and surrounding areas, topography, drainage characteristics, soil properties, and geology.…
Descriptors: Environment, Geology, Instructional Materials, Land Use
Clarkson, W. W.; And Others – 1978
The purpose of this module is to develop a general procedure to decide the feasibility of land application as a waste management alternative, given a specific problem situation. This information provides a framework within which to apply the information presented in all other modules in the program. An outline of the general procedure followed in…
Descriptors: Design, Engineering, Environment, Instructional Materials
Clarkson, W. W.; And Others – 1978
This module summarizes four major reasons for employing monitoring during design and operation of a land application site: documentation of existing water quality and system performance, confirmation of design parameters, provision of data for future designs and for management decisions. Monitoring requirements are examined for different land…
Descriptors: Environment, Land Use, Learning Modules, Pollution
Fraser, Renee White; Shani, Hadasa – 1979
Intended as a companion piece to volume 2 in the Method Series, Environmental Health Planning (CE 024 230), this second of six volumes in the International Health Planning Reference Series is a combined literature review and annotated bibliography dealing with environmental factors in health planning for developing countries. The review identifies…
Descriptors: Air Pollution, Annotated Bibliographies, Biology, Developing Nations
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |  7  |  8  |  9