Working creatively with youth to achieve zero waste, climate-smart communities and a plastic free biosphere.
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​K-12 Checklist
movies, morning announcements, letter templates, posters, lessons & activities
for teachers, administrators, staff, students, parents


Resources for School Food Service Teams -->
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PROMOTION

Movies!
  • "Microplastic Madness" (76 minutes; can be shown in 2, 3, or 5 parts) - Get your free link.  Free for all K-12 schools thru April 30, 2023. bit.ly/freemovie4PFLD  ​Inspire your students to take plastic-free action with Cafeteria Culture’s award winning, student-led movie. This uplifting and informative real life story shows how students started the first Plastic Free Lunch Day & is sure to spark a lively discussion. 
​        Watch the trailer!
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  • Share the Plastic Free Lunch Day USA promo video (3 mins) on school screens and in the classroom as part of morning announcements. ​
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​Announcements, Letter Templates, Messaging
  • Morning Announcements Template (for 5 days leading up to PFLD)
  • Letter Template to Families everywhere  (copy and adapt)
  • NYC Letter template to Families for monthly Plastic Free Lunch Days (copy and adapt; for NYC DOE K-8 schools)
 
  • See all downloadable FLYERS below
         
  • Creative Messaging Tip Sheet for students & teachers->  ​
  • Pack a Zero Waste HOME LUNCH flyer 
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  • PFLD overview flyer (what? why? QR code, and free movie sign up)

Easy Start 
  • One-Page  Step by Step Guide for K-12 Schools and Teachers
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​​If your school is not yet planning a plastic-free action day
  • ​Student Sample Letter to Principal or School Food Director to request a Plastic Free Lunch Day (if your school is not yet planning anything).​ 
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​​​Lessons & Activities


Measure your plastic use and impact 
  • Single-use PLASTIC SEARCH (easy) - Individual student activity for lunch period with lesson plan. Students collect data from school, home or store-bought lunch to gain an understanding of the plastic pollution problem. Complete with teacher notes and Single-Use Plastic SEARCH Worksheet. 
  • CAFETERIA PLASTIC SURVEY (requires planning) - How to lead a waste audit activity for a class, small group, Green Team, or club,  COLLECT before & after DATA to inform others & support your actions. Design & test SOLUTIONS to reduce single use plastics.  ( DATA COLLECTION sheet for Cafeteria Plastic SURVEY )        
(All of the above in one PDF, Step by Step in a Packet for K-12 - guide, letter and surveys, 6-pages) 
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  • Overview Slides: Why Plastic Free Lunch Day? The Problem with Plastic - Plastic Free Lunch Day introduction; slides, with notes; adaptable for K-12​

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MATH Lessons
  • What Can We Eliminate? Plastic-free curriculum for grades 3-7 - slides 
  • Data Analysis - grades 8-12 in 3 parts  -slides - (# 1. Algebra I ; #2. Geometry - Part 1; #3. Geometry Part 2 ​​

Please share your photos, data and stories with us!
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Students at PS15K in NYC collecting data with the "Single-use Plastic Search" worksheets
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More VIdeos!

Show in the classroom, cafeteria, assembly, after school, or club! 
  • ​"Plastic Free Lunch Day - Get ready USA" - (3 minutes)  on Vimeo
  • Plastic Free Lunch Day USA -  a Celebration" on YouTube  (4 mins) ​(watch above on or watch on Vimeo->)
  • CafCu Media on YouTube! - video shorts made by & with students to promote zero waste, plastic free, & climate education, advocacy and action! ​
        - "School Lunch in Japan - it's not just about eating" - 35 million views! (30 mins)
        -  "Kids Exercise Democracy! 5th graders testify at City Hall on plastic litter & wastewater"  (8 mins)
        -  "Dear Humans - a Letter from Marine Creatures; video by 4th graders!" (2 mins)
        -  "LITTER MONSTERS - Youth made stop motion animation!"  (5:36 mins)

More videos made by and with students on YouTube at CafCu Media.
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Flyers
Print these or create your own!

Plastic Free Lunch Day - Cafeteria Culture
For secondary schools.
​Space to add your own logo and date Download PDF ->
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Add the date & your own logo.
​Download PDF
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Add the date & your own logo.
​Download 
Plastic Free Lunch Day NYC
For all schools,; no date,..
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Download PDF ->
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For elementary schools. 
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Download PDF ->
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For elementary schools, cups and utensils. Download the 2-page PDF ->
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Plastic Free Lunch Day NYC DOE
For all schools. Download PDF >
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Download PFLD overview April 19, 2023 -> 
Share your poster creations on social media and tag us:
  Twitter @CafeteriaCu    IG @CafCu   FB CafeteriaCulture  TikTok @CafeteriaCu
#plasticfreelunch   #cafcu 

​For Students! 
Creative Messaging Tip Sheet

​For High School Students

How to Drive Change In Your School Cafeteria - A Guide for High School Students,
adapted from the work of Gauri Rastogi, high school senior and CafCu Youth Advocate and intern, based on her years of advocating to eliminate styrofoam trays from her school district in Michigan.

For College Students 
Step by Step College Guide and Survey, Plastic Free Lunch Day and plastic free action ideas for every day!

For middle & high school and college students
**start a #SkipTheStuff campaign**
to reduce single-use plastic every day!

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Download the Skip The Stuff NYC Skull (no NYC) poster->
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Download the Skip The Stuff NYC Skull poster->
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Download the Skip The Stuff Incinerator poster->

Microplastic Madness GAMES!

Life-Cycle of Plastic - a board game for 2-4 players, ages 10+; download and print out the PDF with game directions, cards, and the board! All you need are 4 bottle caps.
**Play the online version here-> in English and in Spanish! (rules and scorecard are here).
Life-Cycle of Plastic board game
More fun games for elementary age students ->
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Reusable Dishware: Calculate Cost Savings
more reports & videos
Share your PLASTIC FREE LUNCH DAY stories with us!
and inspire others to take plastic free action!

​Post your actions on social media and tag us:
  Twitter @CafeteriaCu    IG @CafCu   FB CafeteriaCulture  TikTok @CafeteriaCu
#plasticfreelunch   #cafcu 

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Single-use Plastic​ Pollution Problem
​ 
in a snapshot

Why DO we need #plasticfreelunch?
The world is awash in toxic and polluting single-use plastics made from hazardous chemicals and climate-damaging fossil fuels that are contaminating our ecosystems, our communities and our bodies. The US creates more plastic waste than any other nation and it never goes away. It degrades into tiny microplastics and then nanoplastics. Scientists have found microplastics in the deepest parts of the ocean, and in our soil, food, water and air, and in our bodies.
380 million metric tons of plastic are produced each year.
The US plastic recycling rate has dropped below 6%!

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US Schools serve 7.35 billion meals annually. Those meals are packed with non-biodegradable single-use plastics (SUPs) that make a significant contribution to the US plastic waste stream and the staggering global plastic pollution problem.  Most of those SUPs end up in a landfill or environment. 

Plastic Free Lunch Day provides students an opportunity to learn about plastic pollution and take meaningful plastic-reduction action.  One plastic free day leads to another and creates a vision and actionable ideas to move forward equitably and sustainably.
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1o reasons to take plastic free, climate action 
  • Making & disposing of plastic is fueling the climate crisis.
  • Plastics are made from fossil fuels.
  • Plastics are the 5th largest contributor of greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Less than 6% of plastic is recycled in the US.
  • Plastic kills 100,000 marine animals every year.
  • The US creates more plastic waste than any other nation.
  • Plastic never goes away. It degrades into tiny microplastics.
  • Scientists have found microplastics in the deepest parts of the ocean, and in our soil, food, water and air.
  • Recent studies have also found microplastics in our bodies: our gut, our tissues, our poop, our blood, the deepest parts of our lungs!
  • We are all eating and breathing microplastics.
What is a Single-Use Plastic and Why is it a Problem?
Each year, we produce over 350 million metric tons of plastic; more than 40% of this is single-use plastic--plastic packaging and foodware that is used for less than 20 minutes.  Because plastic is not recyclable, most discarded plastic is sent to landfills or "leaks" into the natural environment. 

Plastic does not biodegrade. Instead it breaks or fragments into small particles called microplastics and then into smaller particles called nanoplastics.  Because plastic is made from fossil fuels and thousands of persistent toxic chemicals, they transfer thousands of migrating chemicals into our food during use. After disposal and fragmentation, plastic particles carry and distribute these toxic chemicals to every inch of the globe. 

​Scientists have found micro and nanoplastics in our digestive tract, deep in our lung tissue, in the placenta, and circulating in our blood. Nanoplastics deliver thousands of toxic chemicals directly to the organs, tissues, and cells in our bodies. We now face the public health crisis of our time. 

School cafeterias serve over 40 million meals a day and make a large contribution to the plastic waste stream.  School cafeterias are a great place to begin reducing single-use plastics, while also protecting the health of our students--society's most vulnerable members. Plastic free lunch day is a first step that results in useful photos and data but, most importantly, it shows everyone that food-dispensing and eating does not require plastic!
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​News Articles for middle and high school classroom discussion
Single-use plastic is wreaking havoc on the planet. Here’s what you can do to minimize your impact, CNN,  April 22, 2023
Read entire article->
excerpt:

The life cycle of plastic begins underground, where oil and gas are extracted from deep below the surface of the planet. These fossil fuels are then refined in facilities, using extreme temperatures and significant amount of water and energy, where they are transformed into pellets that are eventually melted and molded into things like water bottles, packaging, garbage bags and clothes.

And the widespread use of single-use plastic — the stuff we use once and then throw away — is only made worse by its disposal. Plastics do not break down once they’re thrown into nature. And, alarmingly, only around 9% plastic in the United States is actually recycled, according to the Environmental Protection Agency — even the stuff you specifically threw into the recycle bin.

What you might not realize is this isn’t just a pollution problem. It’s a climate problem. And by the time we start talking about recycling, the damage is already done.
continue reading ->


Plastic has a really big carbon Footprint --
But That Isn't The Whole Story 

Adapted from NPR July 2019 - for 5th grade 
ADAPTED FROM NPR JULY 2019 - FOR 5TH GRADE ->

"The key message that people should take away is that the plastics crisis is a climate crisis hiding in plain sight," Muffett says. 

ORIGINAL ARTICLE
U.S. PLASTICS RECYCLING RATE SLUMPS BELOW 6 PERCENT, ANALYSIS FINDS
​THE WASHINGTON POST, MAY 4, 2022
Entire artilce_>
excerpt:

“The plastics industry must stop lying to the public about plastics recycling. It does not work, it never will work, and no amount of false advertising will change that,” said Judith Enck, who heads Beyond Plastics and served as a regional EPA administrator during the Obama administration. “Instead, we need consumer brand companies and governments to adopt policies that reduce the production, usage and disposal of plastics.”
Though plastics use fell in the early days of the pandemic, consumption has surged along with economic activity. Meanwhile, plastic waste exports — which the authors said are counted toward recycling numbers without proof — have plummeted in the wake of import bans by countries such as China and Turkey.
Deluge of plastic waste’: US is world’s biggest plastic polluter  The Guardian, December 1, 2021,
Entire article ->
excerpt:
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At 42m metric tons of plastic waste a year, the US generates more waste than all EU countries combined.
The advent of cheap, versatile plastics has created “a global scale deluge of plastic waste seemingly everywhere we look”, the report states, with the US a leading contributor of disposable plastics that ends up entangling and choking marine life, harming ecosystems and bringing harmful pollution up through the food chain.
Chemical pollution has passed safe limit for humanity, say scientists  The Guardian, January 18, 2022
Entire article ->
excerpt:

The cocktail of chemical pollution that pervades the planet now threatens the stability of global ecosystems upon which humanity depends, scientists have said.
Plastics are of particularly high concern, they said, along with 350,000 synthetic chemicals including pesticides, industrial compounds and antibiotics. Plastic pollution is now found from the summit of Mount Everest to the deepest oceans, and some toxic chemicals, such as PCBs, are long-lasting and widespread.

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Our VISION
We envision a plastic free, equitable zero waste future where landfill and incinerator garbage as we know it no longer exists;
where post consumption waste from food to packaging is drastically reduced
and what remains benefits our schools, communities, and the environment. 


Cafeteria Culture (CafCu) is a Project of The Fund for the City of New York, a charitable organization.
Founded in 2009 as Styrofoam Out of Schools.
Donations to Cafeteria Culture are eligible for charitable deductions under section 170 of the Internal Revenue Code.
Cafeteria Culture is a vendor of New York City Department of Education via Fund for the City of New York

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