Posts tagged as:

new york city

Greening NYC Private and Public Schools – An Introduction

by Pamela French on December 21, 2009

Pamela FrenchIn the summer of 2008 I felt the itch to be proactive both creatively and environmentally, and hit the city streets with my bike, a flip camera and a question “How would you make New York a Greener Apple?” Thirty short films later, I’ve created this grassroots campaign where New Yorkers themselves tell how they would make their city of New York a “greener” place to live.

Somewhere around six months into my ‘A Greener Apple’ initiative, I thought it was time to talk to the City about what I was doing, and how I could take the worthwhile (doable) answers (i.e. curbside recycling, more bike lanes, less cars, turn of your lights, reusable bags, etc.) I had documented from my man-on-the-street responses, and actually implement them on the streets of New York. This meeting with the City wasn’t as well received as I had hoped it would be. I found that in contrast to what I had expected, and secretly hoped, I instead was the one being questioned as to, “what was I doing in my own home and my children’s school, that was making New York greener?”

Interesting! What was I doing? How was I contributing to this campaign that I was so passionate and excited about? Was I practicing what my campaign was hoping to preach? This led me to look at my own world and my lifestyle choices. How could I reduce my family’s carbon footprint? What could my contribution be to making the City, I so adored, greener and more environmentally friendly?

This idea of individuality — everybody doing his or her part, a baby steps approach towards greening the apple — now became my vision. What I discovered six months in, is still what I’m finding, sixteen months later. In order for me to really make a difference (yes, my ‘A Greener Apple’ campaign was generating awareness and a healthy following), I’d have to start small – plant the seed and hope that it would grow into something bigger. And the best way I found to do this was through my children, and in the environment in which they grow – the City schools.

This doubly made sense to me when I looked back over the answers to my initial question, “How would you make New York A Greener Apple?” I realized it was the children who had the most profound, real and doable answers. So why not start with the children in New York? I remembered a quote,

“while we try to teach our children all about life, our children teach us what life is all about” – Angela Schwindt.

If we focused on greening our City schools, and educating the kids both in their daily school practices and down the line in their curriculum, it would become second nature to them. Whether and how to recycle wouldn’t even be a question, it would be a way of life. The kids would learn it, and then educate their parents and caregivers if they weren’t already up to speed.

This made so much sense, and was even later proven to me when my six-year-old daughter, after watching one of my ‘A Greener Apple’ pieces (Recycle and Reuse), corrected her science teacher as to the proper way to recycle a Poland Spring water bottle – “No Mr. X, the cap goes into the garbage, before you throw the bottle out (recycle it).” The teacher even thanked me (well kind of) for educating him on the City’s proper recycling protocol, via my little girl. By the way, this teacher is now the recycling coordinator at my children’s public school.

Hence, the ‘bigger’ focus to my ‘A Greener Apple’ project began – Greening the City’s schools. At the same time as I was redirecting my energies, my children’s school was moving from one public school building to another and a group of parents agreed to form a Green Team to make the move, and the renovations at the new site, more eco-friendly. We were also allowed to provide the faculty with alternative eco-friendly classroom supply lists to send home with the students on the last day of school. We hoped that the parents would take our suggestions and purchase more environmentally friendly school supplies for the following school year at our new building.

Once I took these first steps, the doors kept opening. Through my internet sites, and my devoted A Greener Apple fans and followers, I learned of The Green Schools Alliance (GSA), an alliance of K to12 public, private, and independent schools uniting to take action on climate change and the environment. As luck had it, immediately following this introduction, I was invited to attend a GSA event at The Collegiate School with my camera in hand.

Before I go any further, I need to explain here why my invitation to film at Collegiate was so exciting, and unexpectedly outrageous for me.

As a native New Yorker and a parent living in New York City, I was amazed when I realized what it entailed to get your child into a good kindergarten. “What do you mean testing and interviewing”? “What, you don’t want my darling, bright son and our super-creative, unique family to be a part of your school”? So outraged, stupefied, and down right humiliated, I thought I’d turn the cameras on this whole admissions process and make a documentary film about this (only in New York) ordeal. So, after a year of casting and finding a production company who was commissioned to make a similar film for TLC, I embarked on the year long making of a doc-reality show for television entitled, “Getting In… Kindergarten.” The reason why I bring this up is that during the production, I begged schools like Collegiate (both private and public) to let me in to film. I was told at the time, under NO circumstances, would they allow me to.

Here I was, three year later, being invited to film inside the coveted Collegiate School that I so wanted in my “Getting In…” film. Complete access to the teachers, the kids, the administration, the building – it wasn’t because policy changed, it was because they were now speaking to a topic that was important to ALL of them, across the board – Greening the New York Schools. Also, I think it’s important for you blog readers, and probably parents of school aged children to know the reason I am writing this blog, and ultimately working towards ‘greening the apple’ (and hopefully the city’s schools). It is for both our children and our children’s children. All my best work is work that I am most passionate about – whether it is getting my kid in to the ‘best’ New York City school I can, or making our kids future environment (New York) greener and more sustainable.

This invitation to film at Collegiate was a coup to say the least. I was now standing inside one of the top private schools in New York City, snickering to myself while interviewing the top Heads of Schools as to how they, ‘would make New York a greener apple”? – They were all so open and willing to discuss and embrace this green school movement – boy it was so exciting!

It too was on this day, that John Shea, the Chief Executive Officer at New York City Department of Education announced that our Chancellor, Joel Klein, was committing the public schools to sign on to the GSA and address the climate change challenge head-on! This was a momentous day for the City schools, and there I was filming it. A documentary about the greening of the city schools was underway, as well as the makings of the best “A Greener Apple (NYC)” to date…

About the Contributor: Pamela French is a regular contributor to the NYC Private Schools Blog in the area of ‘greening’ NYC Private and Public Schools.


{ 0 comments }

NYC Schools and the Green Schools Alliance

by NYC Private Schools on April 22, 2009

In honor of Earth Day, we celebrate a few things:

We celebrate Dr. Seuss and his classic book, The Lorax, published in 1971.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-Y0Az-4wUg[/youtube]

We celebrate the Green Schools Alliance (GSA):

The Green Schools Alliance (GSA) was created by pre-K to grade 12 public, private and independent schools nationwide to galvanize their individual concerns about climate change and the environment into collective action to protect our shared future. Inspired by Mayor Bloomberg’s challenge to NYC institutions to reduce their carbon footprint 30% by 2030, the GSA launched in 2007 with the support of the Mayor’s Office, the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS) and other national, state and local partners.

The GSA is comprised of students, parents, school heads and administrators, business officials, facility managers, trustees and school boards, teachers, and staff all working together to ensure a safe and healthy environment for future generations through the implementation of sustainable, energy-smart solutions today.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4I9iuUamLb0[/youtube]

We celebrate the NYC Private Schools that have signed The Green Schools Climate Commitment:

Allen-Stevenson School, Bank Street School for Children, Berkeley Carroll School, Brearley School, Brooklyn Heights Montessori School, Browning School, Caedmon School, Calhoun School, Chapin School, Church of Epihany Community Day School, Churchill School, Collegiate School, Dwight School, Epiphany Community Nursery School, Ethical Culture Fieldston School, Grace Church School, Hewitt School, Horace Mann School, Little Red School House & Elizabeth Irwin HS, Lycee Francais de New York, Marymount School, Nightingale-Bamford School, Reece School, Riverdale Country School, Rodeph Sholom School, Spence School, Town School, Trevor Day School, Trinity School, United Nations International School, Village Community School

We celebrate the individual leaders of the GSA New York Steering Committee:

School Coordinators: Dan Cooke (Facilities Manager, Lycee Francais de New York), Mark Gordon (Facilities Manager, The Collegiate School), Joe Foresta (Facilities Manager, The Allen-Stevenson School), Ken Higgins (Music Director, The Town School), Sam Keany (Dean of Students, The Browning School), Marc Magnus-Sharpe (Dean of Students, United Nations International School (UNIS)), David Patnaude (Director of Physical Plant, Riverdale Country School)

Student Coordinators: Harrison Monsky (GSA National Student Coordinator; The Collegiate School), James Underberg (GSA National Student Coordinator; The Collegiate School)

Parent Coordinators: Veronique Pittman (Parent, Trinity School; Rainforest Native); Francesca Olivieri (Parent, The Buckley School; Founder and President, Sage Baby)

We celebrate the NYC Private Schools that have made a significant commitment to the GSA by hosting GSA events during the past two years:

School Year 2008-09: The Collegiate School (GSA Green Schools NYC 2009, 04/18/09), The Spence School (GSA Are We Greener One Year Later?, 11/17/08), The Calhoun School (Green Roof Open House Tour, 10/23/08)

School Year 2007-08: The United Nations International School (GSA Green Schools NYC — Resource Fair, 03/05/08), The Town School (Meeting Energy and Carbon Reduction Goals, 01/30/08), The Allen-Stevenson School (An Evening with Thomas Friedman & Friends, 01/12/08), The Allen-Stevenson School (GSA Launch: Energy & Climate Change — What Schools Can Do, 11/11/07)

Finally, we celebrate NYC Public Schools and Department of Education:

As reported by NY1 News on April 9, 2009: 1,500 New York City Schools Join Green School Alliance

City schools are getting on board with the mayor’s PlaNYC initiative.

Department of Education officials announced in Downtown Manhattan today that they are measuring energy consumption and carbon emissions from school buildings and taking steps to reduce them 30 percent by 2017.

“If you make information transparent, the children know about it, they will talk about it – why haven’t we met our targets, what are we doing?” said Schools Chancellor Joel Klein. “It’ll make them more conscious, turning off lights in schools, other matters involving energy consumption. That’s the way you change things.”

Thank you to the individuals and institutions who are trying to make NYC a greener apple. This is a terrific example of collaboration between NYC Private Schools, and the collaboration between NYC Private and Public Schools.


{ 1 comment }

3 Riverdale Private Schools With Strong Traditions

September 23, 2008

If you live in the Riverdale area of New York City then you have 3 private school alternatives available to you. The 3 private schools available in New York are:

The Fieldston School
The Horace Mann School
The Riverdale Country School

The Fieldston School
The Fieldston School of Ethical Culture has been in operation since 1878. The schools focus is [...]

Read the full article �

Welcome To NYC Private Schools Blog

September 22, 2008

photo credit: aturkus
Welcome to the NYC Private Schools blog. We will work hard to keep you informed of the best private schools in New York City from Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island and the Bronx. Each borough within NYC has its own special private schools, religious schools, and educational institutions for children of all [...]

Read the full article �

Bad Behavior has blocked 500 access attempts in the last 7 days.