About this blog Subscribe to this blog

The Great Garbage Patch State

4408273247_26f6a8fc36_o

Meet the new Garbage Patch State rising in the middle of the oceans, where plastic is king. The new country’s flag is blue like the seas, with an emblem of red recycling signs. As of April 11, 2013, the garbage patches scattered in the five oceans across the world are symbolically recognized by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) as a federal nation.

What Is the Garbage Patch State?

The garbage patches are giant swirling masses of plastic trash and other debris that have been trapped by the oceanic currents and are floating on the water. The plastic littering the sea comes from various marine and land sources, such as shipping, tourism, fishing, and other solid waste carried into the oceans by rivers.

The exact dimensions of the five islands of the Garbage Patch State aren't known. Some say it's the largest concentration of plastic debris in the world. The Garbage Patch in the North Pacific alone is believed to be the size of Texas or perhaps twice that size.

Charles Moore, the oceanographer who first discovered the North Pacific Garbage Patch in 1997, told the San Francisco Chronicle that it isn’t a solid island, as some people believe. Instead, it resembles a soupy mass, undetectable by overhead satellite photos because it's 80 percent plastic and therefore translucent. The plastic moves just beneath the surface, from one inch to depths of 300 feet, he added.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) says that “regardless of its exact size, mass, and location, manmade debris does not belong in our oceans and waterways.”

Why Is It Dangerous?

Dr. Onno Gross is a marine biologist, environmental journalist, and president of the Marine Conservation Organization DEEPWAVE. He wrote on the Smithsonian’s Ocean Portal blog that “thousands of sea animals die in agony through the deadly flotsam of our consumer society. There are at least 138 marine species that regularly entangle themselves in this rubbish.”

Unlike organic debris, which is biodegradable, plastic disintegrates under the sunlight into tiny pieces that never decompose. These small particles become a source of food for marine birds and animals, such as sea turtles, albatrosses, and even whales.

“The massive production of plastic and inadequate disposal has made plastic debris an important and constant pollutant on beaches and in oceans around the world,” Lorena M. Rios Mendoza, Ph.D., said at an American Chemical Society (ACS) meeting on April 8 in New Orleans. Her team was announcing the discovery of a garbage patch even in the Great Lakes!

Fish and birds could be harmed from accidently eating the plastic particles or absorbing toxic substances that leach out into the water, Rios said. Her team knows from analyses of fish stomachs that fish are consuming the plastic particles. Fish also could pass such substances to consumers.

What Can We Do to Help Clean Up?

NOAA believes that cleaning up is very challenging. “It is certainly not cost-effective to skim the surface of the entire ocean.”

“You can't take these particles out of the ocean. You can just stop putting them in", agrees oceanographer Charles Moore.

“No more trash in our oceans must be our highest priority”, warns Dr. Gross.

The Ocean Conservancy, an organization that fights on behalf of oceans, offers many tips to help treat the problem at its roots: 

  • Put trash in a secure, lidded receptacle, since most marine debris starts out on land.
  • Properly recycle everything you can in your area.
  • Less is more: don't buy stuff you don't need, and choose items that use less packaging.
  • Inform and inspire your friends to help stop marine debris at the source and volunteer to clean up beaches.
  • Bring your own containers for picnics instead of using disposables.
  • Take your own reusable bags whenever you go shopping.

 

What are your ideas on how to help clean up the growing patches of garbage in our oceans? Share them in the comments section below!

—Kid Reporter Hannah Prensky

Photo via Flickr

How do you celebrate Earth Day?

Kr_news_041713_earthdaytulloch_header

Celebrate Earth Day and the fight to keep our planet clean on April 22!

Scholastic Kid Reporters explore ways to make every day Earth Day. And this year, they look at the environmental challenges facing the country due to climate change.

After Superstorm Sandy hit in October 2012, New York and New Jersey were left badly damaged. But one of the hardest hit areas were those states' coastal regions. A lot of people live along the water, and they faced a massive amount of cleanup and rebuilding. But they're also facing a long-term problem: Rising sea levels and the possibility of storms like Sandy becoming more common thanks to the changes in Earth's climate. These very real threats are changing borders and living areas, as well as forcing residents and local governments think about how to address the problems facing their communities because of a warming planet.

The Kid Reporters talk to scientists, local officials, and residents to find out what impact Sandy had on the environment, what might be in store as temperatures and sea levels rise, and what that means for their communities.

Check out the Scholastic News Kids Press Corps Earth Day 2013 Special Report! Once you've look through the stories, share with us how you celebrate Earth Day in you community!

Photo: Aerial footage of Hurricane Sandy damage five months after the storm. Taken from a miniature Quadcopter along the coast of Mantoloking, New Jersey. (Photo: Wendell A. Davis Jr./FEMA)

Share your love of poetry!

9781423108054_p0_v4_s260x420April is National Poetry Month, and a new book has been released to celebrate poetry and inspire kids to read, love, and memorize it.

Poems to Learn by Heart is a collection of poetry organized by Caroline Kennedy. It features short poems and long ones organized by subject. The goal of the book is to get kids to enjoy poetry and encourage them to know their favorite poems by heart. Artist Jon J Muth illustrated the poems as watercolor paintings. Kennedy and Muth collaborated on another book of poetry in 2005, A Family of Poems: My Favorite Poetry for Children.

Check out Kid Reporter Amiri Tulloch's interview with Caroline Kennedy and Jon J Muth about Poems to Learn by Heart, and let us know in the comments section below why you think it's important to read poetry and what your favorite poem is!

First Lady get Chicago moving!

On February 28, I had the chance to cover a big Let's Move! event in Chicago. Let's Move! is First Lady Michelle Obama's intitiative to get kids healthy through physical fitness and better eating. The event in Chicago marked the three-year anniversary of Let's Move! and kicked off the Active Schools campaign.


Before the event even started, I interviewed the Secretary of Education Mr. Arne Duncan. I spoke to him about education cuts, and why it is important to balance homework and physical education.  I spoke to Mr. Duncan in the media room right before he went onstage to speak in front of the media, teachers, and students who came out to hear him and the other athletes and notable people speak.

In the interview, Secretary Duncan explains why it's important to be physically active during the school day, why it's important to balance homework and physical education, and how looming budget cuts could impact kids and teachers across the country.

Watch my interview with Secretary Duncan below:



After the event, I interviewed Gabby Douglas, the gold medalist in gymnastics in London, Ashton Eaton, the gold medalist and world record holder in the decathlon in London, and Bo Jackson, who played both professional baseball and football at the same time.

Gabby Douglas spoke about how it is important to be active and how you have to train to gain success. She trains for 4 and a half to 5 hours a day! Check out that interview, too!




You can find out more about the Let's Move! Active Schools event by reading my story on the Scholastic News Kids Press Corps website! And learn more about Let's Move! by checking out the stories my fellow Kid Reporters have written about the program.

—Kid Reporter Natalie Wexler

Documentary portrays “the real King”

King 2

The Martin Luther King documentary King: A Filmed Record… Montgomery to Memphis presents the civil rights leader almost entirely in highly public moments, like his speeches.

But there are a few more private moments. One is an interview Dr. King gives to a few journalists crowded into a small airplane. It’s one of the more personal and intimate moments we see in the movie. But Dr. King still sounds just like the public figure we’ve all come to know.

After I attended the screening of King at the Church of the Intercession in Harlem, I wanted to learn more about Dr. King. I especially wanted to know how well the movie captures who Dr. King was.

So I contacted Professor David Garrow. Professor Garrow wrote a Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of King, Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

“[Dr. King] was always very conscious of being formal, and proper, and dignified,” Professor Garrow told me. “Part of it is going all the way back to Montgomery, of being super aware that he is being seen as a prime representative of all black people.”

Today, Dr. King still inspires people – in America and around the world. Our view of Dr. King – and the civil rights movement he led – is based almost entirely on the types of words and images we see in King: A Filmed Record.

And after watching the movie, we’re left wondering what Dr. King might be discussing today had he not been assassinated in 1968.

“In the last two years of his life, King most often times is speaking in a much more challenging, critical voice about the degree of change that is needed in American society and American behavior around the world,” Garrow says. “Anyone seeing this film would be very powerfully surprised that the real Martin Luther King is not simply the ‘I have a Dream” optimism of 1963.”

“This film is the real King,” he adds.

Check out my story about the New York screening of King: A Filmed Record… Montgomery to Memphis on the Scholastic News Kids Press Corps website!

—Kid Reporter Fred Hechinger

Why do you think Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is still important today? Has he inspired you? How? Let us know in the comments section below!

Photo: A still from the movie King: A Filmed Record… Montgomery to Memphis (© Kino Lorber)

My day at the White House

Sostem_blogThe day after President Barack Obama’s State of the Union speech, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) organized the State of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math — or SoSTEM — event at the Eisenhower Executive Building. My editor Dante arranged for me to attend it.

When I got to the meeting room at 9:50 a.m., I went to interview Bobak Ferdowsi, better known as the Mohawk Guy, who is the flight director for the Mars Curiosity Program. Bobak was very nice and funny. He was wearing his “normal” Mohawk, except it was dyed blue and red. One side of his head said MARS.

The interview went quite smoothly. At one point during the interview we were briefly joined by Dr. John Holdren, the assistant to the President for Science and Technology and Director of OSTP. Dr. Holdren chatted with the Mohawk Guy about the State of the Union speech the night before.

At 10 a.m., the SoSTEM meeting began. The panel for the meeting included the Mohawk Guy, Lori Garver (deputy director of NASA), Todd Park (US chief technology officer), high school student Jake Andraka (2012 Intel Science Competition winner), and iTriage CEO Peter Hudson. Dr. Holdren was the moderator and started the meeting. In the audience, there were about 50 students from nearby middle and high schools. Some students asked about the Mars program and NASA, and others asked about STEM.

It was a really great meeting, and it was great to go to the White House — especially on one of my first assignments!

Check out my report on the SoSTEM event and my interview with Mohawk Guy on the Scholastic News Kids Press Corps website!

How important do you think a good STEM education is? Let us know in the comments below!

—Kid Reporter Emily Shao

Photo: Kid Reporter Emily Shao talks with Dr. John Holdren (center) before the SoSTEM event on Wednesday, February 13, 2013. (Courtesy Emily Shao)

Happy New Year!

DSC09873People all over the world are ready to celebrate the Chinese New Year. At the International School of Indiana in Indianapolis, students celebrated the Year of the Snake with a fun-packed assembly.

Students from 6th grade up to high school seniors who are learning Mandarin (the official language of China) educated the rest of the school about Chinese cultures and other rituals. This was taught through song, dance, instruments, and videos. Some students even performed Tai Chi!

Mandarin teachers Janet Huang and Sophie Li made it their duty to make sure that every person in attendance knew how to say a phrase in Chinese. The most popular was: 春节快乐!(chūn jié kuài lè), which means Happy New Year.

The assembly was important for various reasons, one being that the mayor of Indianapolis, Greg Ballard, was in attendance. After the assembly, Mayor Ballard expressed the importance of learning about new cultures.

“I think it is tremendous. We try to celebrate the Chinese culture within the city, and now that we have a sister city relationship with Hangzhou which is on the East Coast of China, we do Chinese festivals now in the city so we can celebrate it along with them,” said Mayor Ballard. “It is nice to see the celebration.”

—Kid Reporter 易欣雷 (Grace Ybarra)

How does your community celebrate Chinese New Year? Let us know in the comments below!

And for more on Chinese New Year, check out the Scholastic News Kids Press Corps Chinese New Year Special Report!

Photo: A dancer performs during a Chinese New Year celebration at the International School of Indiana. (Courtesy Grace Ybarra)

Long Island Buried

Kr_news_021213_liblizzard_header

Dangerous conditions and historic snow snarl communities


The winter storm that hit the northeast over the weekend had a tremendous effect on Long Island, New York, especially Suffolk County and Town of Brookhaven.

People joked about stocking up on supplies before the storm, but it became no joke when roads became unusable and residents could not leave their homes for days.  Schools were closed early Friday and eventually Monday and Tuesday since streets were still not plowed.

"The storm hit at a time commuters were making their way back from the city," said Suffolk county Executive Steven Bellone. "The snow just swallowed them up. It came down so hard and so fast." 

Read the rest of the story on the Scholastic News Kids Press Corps website!

—Kid Reporter William Russell


Photo: Snow buries Kid Reporter William Russell's bloc in Sound Beach. This was the scene all over Brookhaven Town in Long Island, New York, after the winter storm. (William Russell)
 

Snow covers Connecticut

On Thursday evening, weather reports predicted a little more than seven inches of snow would fall in Westport, Connecticut. Those weathermen were in for a shock.

Storm Nemo dropped a foot and a half of snow on Westport, a coastal Connecticut town.

Schools were open Friday morning, but suddenly the skies opened up.  Thick snow rained down on the town.  Students arrived at school through the treacherous conditions, but were soon notified that there would be early dismissal for the Westport Public Schools.

After school let out, kids took to the biggest hills they could find armed with their sleds.  Everyone enjoyed shooting down the slopes with their friends. Friday night brought heavy winds, but Saturday morning the children were back at the town’s best sledding spots.

The 18 inches of snow were the most in two years.  Most kids said that they spent the weekend sipping hot chocolate, skiing, sledding, and enjoying the snow.

—Kid Reporter Cooper Boardman

Blizzard dumps massive amount of snow on Long Island

LIsnow

A place still recovering from Hurricane Sandy gets hit with nearly three feet of snow


The Town of Brookhaven was hit the hardest by the blizzard Nemo. Some neighborhoods -- including my community of Sound Beach -- got 32 inches of snow!

It all started Thursday night as people started to prepared for the storm.  We all lived through Hurricane Sandy, and a lot of people feared they would lose power during this storm, too. There were also long lines at gas stations and gas was running out -- just like what happened with Sandy. People waited in long lines at grocery stores to get supplies.

On Friday, we woke up to light snow but still went to school. By 12:45 my school was closed and we all got to go home! The snow was getting heavier. Weather stations kept saying it would turn to rain but it never did.  All night the snow got heavier and heavier. We could hear branches cracking outside.  Cars were getting stuck on roads. People we knew were trapped in cars or at train stations trying to figure out how to get home!

The snow got so high that we couldn't open our front door. The branches on trees we hanging all the way to the ground.  We just kept our fingers crossed the power would stay on.

By Saturday morning, the snow had ended and we could see our winter wonderland! Although some people were not happy to shovel! The sound of snow blowers fill the air.  Kids are snowball fighting and sledding.  The snow is so high that its difficult to walk in some spots.

The town of Brookhaven has issued an emergency executive order that states nobody is allowed to be out on the roads starting at 10:00 a.m. until further notice.  The roads are really dangerous for travel.

I plan in spending my day building a snowman and drinking lots of hot chocolate!

—Kid Reporter William Russell

Photo: Snow blankets cars an streets in Sound Beach, Long Island. There is so much snow that tree branches are sagging under the weight. (Courtesy William Russell)

Categories

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in Scholastic News Kids Press Corps Blog are strictly those of the author and do not reflect the opinions or endorsement of Scholastic, Inc.