| 
			Illinois EPA Launches Annual 
			Environmental Education Competition for Fifth and Sixth Grade 
			StudentsAgency Encourages Youth Creativity About 
			How to Protect the Environment
 
 
  Send a link to a friend 
			
            
            [January 03, 2020]  
			
			LINCOLN 
			- Fifth and sixth grade writers and artists from around Illinois are 
			invited to compete in this year’s Poster, Poetry and Prose Contest 
			sponsored by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).  | 
        
            | 
			
			 This year’s contest theme is "Algae: The Good, the 
			Bad, and the Ugly... How Can You Keep Your Local Pond Healthy?" 
			focusing on how algae can affect waterbodies (good and bad). 
			The theme also emphasizes how to prevent nonpoint 
			source pollution, including nutrient runoff, to maintain healthy 
			water ecosystems. Educators are asked to introduce these topics 
			using the Illinois EPA’s newly developed, free curriculum: 
			"Environmental Pathways surface water unit Why is the Pond Green?" 
			The unit was developed by the Office for Mathematics, Science, and 
			Technology Education (MSTE) at the University of Illinois 
			Urbana-Champaign and is aligned with Next Generation Science 
			Standards (NGSS). 
			
			 
			
 Each school can enter up to eight works (four posters and four 
			written) depicting this year’s theme. 
			Entries must be postmarked and sent in to the Illinois EPA by 
			February 3, 2020.
 
			An in house panel from the Illinois EPA will judge 
			all entries to select the finalists, and those entries will then be 
			judged by an outside panel of authorities to determine the top 
			twelve winners. 
			
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
				 
				 
All finalists, together with their families and teachers, will be 
invited to an awards ceremony and reception on April 18 at the Old State Capitol 
historic site in Springfield. After the awards ceremony, participants are 
invited to attend the City of Springfield’s Earth Awareness Fair on the Old 
State Capitol’s lawn. Finalist entries will be on exhibit in the atrium of the 
Illinois EPA’s headquarters building in Springfield from April 20 through May 
13, and the top winners will be featured on the Illinois EPA’s website.
 Information about the annual event can be obtained on Illinois EPA’s website at:
https://www2.illinois.gov/ epa/topics/ education/contest/Pages/efault.aspx,  
or by contacting Kristi Morris, Environmental Education Coordinator for the 
Illinois EPA, at 217-558-7198, or by email at
Kristi.Morris@illinois.gov.  
The Environmental Pathways curriculum unit can be found at:
https://pathways.mste. 
illinois.edu/.
 
				 
			[Illinois Office of Communication and 
			Information] |