Green Schools : Electric Youth
        
        
        
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Students from Montgomery County Public Schools light the way to energy efficiency.
A STUDENT COMMITTEE whose main duty ischanging light bulbs may sound like the punch line to a badjoke, but as the students and faculty at Montgomery CountyPublic Schools (MCPS) in Rockville, MD, know, changing a lightbulb is no laughing matter. As part of the district's green initiative,all standard incandescent and fluorescent light bulbsmust go, and careful planning must be done to ensure that notone old bulb in the district's 200 schools is left behind. Eventhe illuminated exit signs must be tallied. Once inventory iscomplete, the old bulbs will be replaced by a variety of energyefficientlighting alternatives, including individual task lamps,LED lighting, and good old-fashioned daylight.
 
GANG GREEN: MCPS student
   teams are leaders of the district's
  conservation program.
 As technology expands its role in the classroom and more  districts adopt year-round schedules, K-12 energy use and its  affiliated costs are skyrocketing. It's a truth that weighs heavily  not only on the environment, but also on a school's budget.  Money that could be better spent upgrading computer hardware  and software is instead needed to cover electricity costs  generated by the obsolete machines the new units would  replace. By focusing on the big picture and retrofitting older  buildings with energy-saving substitutes, MCPS is relieving the  burden of its increased technology needs while teaching its  students how to become better global citizens.  
But how exactly does a district get students excited about  energy use? MCPS created a program called the School  Eco Response Team (SERT), through  which each school in the district receives personalized guidelines  for energy usage and is rewarded for achieving those  goals each semester. A school's goal is based on its history  of energy usage; results are judged by comparing current use  against the same semester from two years earlier.  
The SERT program functions just like any other school  club. Interested students sign up and attend regular meetings,  where they decide on a course of action. They hang  posters throughout their campuses encouraging energy conservation  and post signs above light switches as a reminder  that lights should be turned off when leaving a room. Armed  with light meters, wattmeters, and thermometers, the students  measure the amount of light emitted in a teacher's  classroom, or the heat produced by an unused computer  or classroom mini-fridge. In many cases, they  issue "tickets" to the offending teachers.  
 Anja Caldwell, former manager of the SERT initiative  and now the manager of the Green Building Program,  another aspect of MCPS' conservation effort, says that  recruiting students for the program is a snap. "There are  two students in one of our high schools who are always  with their wattmeters, showing teachers how much energy  they're using," she says. "The kids really get into it."  
The school's SERT teams help maintenance staff with  the task of swapping out all T-12 and T-8 fluorescent  bulbs with more-efficient, low-mercury T-8 fluorescent  lighting. The new T-8 bulbs are made with a thinner  glass tube than T-12s, producing more light per bulb,  and contain less harmful mercury than older T-8 bulbs.  That's where the light meters come in. Students measuring  the light intensity in classrooms when every fluorescent  overhead light fixture was in use found that the  bulbs were emitting 120 foot-candles, the standard unit  of light intensity. Caldwell says the ideal measurement  for a classroom is 35 to 50 foot-candles; anything more can increase glare and tax students' eyes. By filling only half of  the classrooms' existing fixtures with low-mercury T-8 fluorescent  bulbs, the district has reduced not only its energy bill, but  also the stress on students' and faculty's eyesight.  
The SERT teams discovered another interesting fact with the  aid of their wattmeters: Many teachers were keeping on their  overhead lights while working in their empty classrooms during  off hours-- 1,500 watts of energy were being used to light a  room for one person. The teachers had no other option. The  district began purchasing Ikea task lamps with  compact fluorescent bulbs for the teachers' desks at about $10  dollars per lamp. By using a task lamp rather than overhead  lights while working in the classroom alone, teachers used 15  watts of energy rather than 1,500. Suddenly, grading papers and  creating lesson plans became much less expensive.
   Taking the LEED on Conservation
Taking the LEED on Conservation
Montgomery County Public Schools has finished construction onGreat Seneca Creek Elementary School, Maryland's first LEED(Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design)-certified elementaryschool. Created by the US Green Building Council,LEED for Schools providesdesign and construction standards that account for the uniqueneeds of K-12 schools. By treating Great Seneca Creek Elementaryas an interactive classroom, the school's 640 elementary studentshave become experts on the green building materials and technologyused in the project-- including dual-flush toilets, bathroom stallsmade from recycled plastic, and a geothermal heating and coolingsystem that harvests the constant temperature of the earth.
For a student-created virtual tour of Great Seneca Creek ElementarySchool, visit here.
 The same concept was applied to the computer labs, where  overhead lights can increase glare on monitors. By purchasing a  set of Ikea floor lamps for each lab and lighting them using compact  fluorescent bulbs rather than traditional incandescent bulbs,  the district cut down the energy used in an already electricity-heavy  room. Next, the district switched out the incandescent bulbs in  illuminated exit signs with LED lighting. At about $40 per bulb,  LED lights are too expensive for classroom use, but with a life  span of 50,000 to 60,000 hours (versus about 1,000 hours for  an incandescent bulb) and using a fraction of the watts, they are  "a no-brainer," Caldwell says, for use in lighted exit signs.  
Another energy-saving solution Caldwell introduced to the  district was the installation of translucent roller blinds. Unlike  traditional blinds, which block daylight altogether, translucent  roller blinds, made from basket-woven fiberglass materials, allow  outside light into the classroom while providing complete privacy  from outside views. By allowing filtered daylight into the classroom,  a school can eliminate the need for overhead lighting  altogether during the brightest parts of the day.  
MechoShade Systems, a New York  City-based company known as a pioneer of solar shading, donated  its ThermoVeil vinyl roller blinds for trial use in two science labs  at MCPS' Northwood High School. In the time since the donation  was made, MechoShade has developed a new, translucent EcoVeil  roller blind that is completely free of PVC, a popular plastic,  ensuring that the blinds will not only trim energy costs while in  use, but also reduce future waste issues at the end of their  lifetime-- not to mention protect students from the health risks  linked to PVC. Caldwell is hoping to introduce EcoVeil blinds  districtwide in the near future. Unfortunately, roller blinds are still  an expensive option, but, as with many energy-saving products,  the high initial costs are relieved down the road.  
With the SERT program, Montgomery County has tapped into  the cheapest and most effective way to cut energy costs--   changing user habits. Turning off lights in an empty classroom;  using desk lamps rather than overhead lighting; eliminating  vending machines from cafeterias; powering down computers  and monitors at the end of the school day-- these are the  ultimate energy savers, and according to Caldwell, they have  borne a 15 percent drop in the district's energy costs.  
What MCPS has done is involve its students in tasks that  could have easily been assigned to building maintenance. As a  result, according to Jill Coutts, a science teacher at the district's  Poolesville High School who works with the school's SERT team,  "These kids have changed the whole culture of energy use  throughout the district." Borrowing from an old proverb, you  might say the district had the wisdom to teach its students to  fish, and in so doing has provided them with lessons that will  serve them a lifetime.
Jennifer Demski is a freelance writer based in Los Angeles, CA.