ADVOCACY
Students view Table Manners, a video installation by Zina Saro-Wiwa, in which Niger Delta residents share a meal on screen, inspiring written dialogue and cross-cultural connection.
Christine Lakatos
Using art to express messages, meaning, and emotion is a powerful form of communication, and one that children can easily relate to. Combining visual art with environmental themes is a natural fit. When I started our first Green Team over ten years ago, one of our earliest projects was a giant sea turtle made from the very things sea turtles often mistake for food: plastic grocery bags, packaging, bottle caps, and cardboard.
The sea turtle still hangs in our school hallway today, and its visual impact helps even my youngest students understand the message at first glance. Over time, the idea of helping the planet grew more meaningful as students began talking about plastic pollution and how human actions affect nature.
In my experience, it is customary for art teachers to request consumable materials at the beginning of each school year. A letter sent home asking for donations such as newspaper, egg cartons, and plastic containers saves money and also sparks creativity. Once you’ve dived into a recycling bin a time or two, you start to think differently about the environment.
As I shared that growing awareness with my students, a transformation began. I started to see myself not just as an art teacher, but as an environmental advocate. At the same time, my students began to open up about the things they care about in nature (especially animals), and our shared interests helped build stronger relationships.
Using the very materials they had donated, we explored ways to turn those items into something new and meaningful. I introduced the concept of upcycling and often held Make-It-And-Take-It reward days, where students created something using the materials they donated. These experiences brought a great deal of joy, and I would often hear, “Art is my favorite subject” or “This is the best day ever!”
When we held discussions about how to care for the planet, recycling and upcycling were always among the first ideas students mentioned. That was the beginning of their transformation.
As our projects continued to grow, young leaders began to emerge. We painted a pledge poster that students could sign after our school discontinued the use of plastic straws. We created Green Team buttons by repurposing old ones with student designs. We used brown paper bags and milk cartons saved from lunch to support lessons about local artists.
Students were always eager to help, whether it was by making labels for a marker recycling collection box or designing plant markers for a local native garden. This helped them connect their artwork to ecosystems in their own community. Our most recent project, a giant cardboard shoe, helped students visualize and better understand their carbon footprint.
These hands-on projects gave students meaningful ways to use their voices and realize their impact within their school and community.
Since 2016, our school has been recognized as a Michigan Green School. More recently, we were honored to receive national recognition as the recipient of the U.S. Department of Education Green Ribbon School, and art played a big part in making that happen.
Environmental learning became embedded in our weekly art lessons. Our schoolwide art show, themed Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Reimagine, brought together everything students had explored. The pride they felt sparked a shift in our entire school community.
The transformation was not just in the art we made, but in how students began to see themselves and their role within their environment.
Over the course of my teaching career, Iʼve learned how easy it can be to use discarded materials in the art room and turn them into something beautiful, meaningful, and full of purpose. Projects like building cardboard kitty forts for our local animal shelter or drawing portraits of adoptable pets show students that their creativity can make a real impact.
These projects don’t stay in the art room. They’ve become part of our school culture and beyond, helping students see themselves as leaders, artists, and problem-solvers within their classroom, school, and community. I used to think my role was only about teaching art. Now I know I’m helping grow a generation of changemakers, one project at a time.
The transformation was not just in the art we created, but in how students began to see themselves and their role within their environment.
Christine Lakatos is an elementary art educator with more than thirty years of experience and a passion for connecting creativity and sustainability. She has been nominated twice for Teacher of the Year and is a three-time recipient of the PTA Founders Day Award. In addition to teaching art, she leads her school’s Green Team, empowering students through hands-on environmental initiatives. Her work in art and sustainability has been recognized at the local and national levels. Learn more about her projects at sites.google.com/livoniapublicschools.org/green-team-at-hayes/what-is-the-green-team. cmlakatos1000@gmail.com