My Journey to Circular Fashion

Students follow Coco, Dean and Poppy as they shop for new clothes. Poppy offers her friends a sustainable alternative to their “fast fashion” choices. They also learn how marketing, worker exploitation, overproduction and overconsumption lead to massive amounts of clothing waste.

Unit Overview

Through readings, activities and discussions, students follow Coco, Dean and Poppy as they shop for new clothes. Poppy offers her friends a sustainable alternative to their “fast fashion” choices. She introduces them to Rosie, who runs a second-hand clothing store. Rosie explains how marketing, worker exploitation, overproduction and overconsumption lead to massive amounts of clothing waste. Students explore solutions offered by “circular fashion”—the opposite of “throw-away” fashion.   

Grades

  • Grade 3
  • Grade 4
  • Grade 5

Lesson Type

In-class or online lesson

Environmental Topics

Ecosystems, Green Guardianship, Environmental Justice, Pollution, Resource Conservation, Sustainable Human Development, Waste Management

Environmental Literacy Core Principles

For a summary of the environmental literacy principles and concepts embedded in this lesson series, please visit Green Guardians Environmental Literacy Core Principles.

Standards

ELA: RL.3.1, RL.3.2, RL.3.3, RL.3.4, W.3.7, W.3.8, SL.3.1, SL.3.2, SL.3.3, SL.3.4, SL.3.6, RL.4.1, RL.4.4, RL.4.7, W.4.7, W.4.8, W.4.9, SL.4.1, SL.4.2, SL.4.3, SL.4.4, RL.5.1, RL.5.3, RL.5.4, W.5.7, W.5.8, W.5.9, SL.5.1, SL.5.2, SL.5.3, SL.5.4
History-Social Science: HSS-3.5.3
Science: 3-5-ETS1-, 3-5-ETS1-2

Guides

Teacher Guide

This project may easily be extended into optional family discussions and activities around clothing, sustainable and unsustainable fashion trends, reuse of clothing and upcycling and recycling fabric waste. To facilitate this engagement, a family guide (in English and Spanish) has been created which teachers may choose to forward to interested parents and guardians.

Family Guide (English)

Lessons

Three lessons of 30-40 minutes each.

Lesson 1: A Shopping Trip

Through a story and related activities, students are introduced to the advantages of wearing reused clothing. Coco, Dean and Poppy are shopping for new clothes to wear on the first day of school. At the mall, Coco and Dean are captivated by cheap “fast fashions”. But Poppy will have none of it. She invites her friends to Rosie’s Second-hand Shop where she volunteers. Coco and Dean begin to reconsider their shopping habits.

Lesson 2: What a Waste!

Through a story and related activities, students learn about the environmental impact of clothing. Rosie explains that the fashion industry makes a huge carbon footprint. It feeds consumers’ demand for cheap, stylish clothes by producing items quickly and in large quantities. Students consider how textile waste is managed and where it ends up. Donating used clothing to thrift stores like Rosie’s is only a partial solution.

Lesson Materials

Lesson 3: 6Rs for Reducing Clothing Waste  

In the third lesson, Poppy and friends research more on clothing waste and discuss the social impact of the “throwaway” culture.  They are determined to make fashion circular by applying the 6Rs: refuse, re-wear, reuse, repair, repurpose and recycle. They also learn about the pros and cons of organic cotton and alternative fibers like bamboo. The lesson invites students to start their own circular fashion initiative by identifying a clothing-waste related problem at home or in their community, researching existing practices and proposing a solution.

Lesson Materials

Bananas About Chocolate

Students follow the story of Bruno and his friends during their visit to a chocolate festival. As they learn more about chocolate, they begin to question the production practices that keep chocolate at low prices.

Unit Overview

Through readings, activities and discussions, students follow the story of Bruno and his friends during their visit to a chocolate festival. As they learn more about chocolate, they begin to question the production practices that keep chocolate at low prices. After meeting a fair trade chocolate entrepreneur, they decide to start their own sustainable chocolate company. But before that can happen, they have a lot of research to do.

Grades

  • Grade 3
  • Grade 4
  • Grade 5

Lesson Type

In-class or online lesson

Environmental Topics

Climate Change, Environmental Justice, Ecosystems, Resource Conservation, Sustainable Human Development

Environmental Literacy Core Principles

For a summary of the environmental literacy principles and concepts embedded in this lesson series, please visit Green Guardians Environmental Literacy Core Principles.

Standards

ELA: RF.3.4, RI.3.1, RI.3.2, RI.3.3, RI.3.4, RI.3.5, RI.3.6, RI.3.7, RI.3.9, W.3.2, W.3.4, W.3.5, W.3.6, W.3.7, W.3.8, SL.3.1., SL.3.2, SL.3.3, SL.3.5, SL.3.6, RF.4.4, RI.4.1, RI.4.2, RI.4.3, RI.4.4, RI.4.5, RI.4.7, RI.4.9, W.4.2, W.4.4, W.4.5, W.4.6, W.4.7, W.4.8, SL.4.1., SL.4.3, SL.4.4, SL.4.5, RF.5.4, RI.5.1, RI.5.2, RI.5.4, RI.5.5, RI.5.6, RI.5.7, RI.5.8, RI.5.9, W.5.2, W.5.4, W.5.5, W.5.6, W.5.7, W.5.8, SL.5.1, SL.5.3, SL.5.4, SL.5.5, SL.5.6
HSS: HSS-3.5.1, HSS-3.5.2, HSS-3.5.3
Science: 3-5-ETS1-2, 5-ESS3-1

Guides

Teacher Guide

This project may easily be extended into optional family discussions and activities around chocolate, supply chains and fair trade. To facilitate this engagement, a family guide (in English and Spanish) has been created which teachers may choose to forward to interested parents and guardians.

Family Guide (English)

Lessons

Two lessons of 30-40 minutes each and a 3-day project. 

Lesson 1: All About Chocolate

Through a story and related activities, students explore a chocolate festival with Bruno and his friends and learn about the history of chocolate and the chocolate industry today. As Bruno and his friends learn more, they begin to question the practices in chocolate production. They then meet Fabio Huerta, a sustainable chocolatier, who introduces them to the concept of “bean to bar”, a sustainable practice to making chocolate.

Lesson 2: The Chocolate Supply Chain

Through a brochure and related activities, students are introduced to the concept of supply chains that link the developed and developing worlds. They also learn about the hidden human and environmental costs of the chocolate industry. To make better and fairer chocolate, Bruno and his friends decide to start a chocolate company based on ethical principles.

Lesson Materials

WebQuest: Bruno’s Chocolate  

In this 3-day WebQuest, Bruno and his friends research the problems facing the chocolate industry today and their solutions. Students join the characters in reading articles, watching videos and answering questions about different stakeholders in the chocolate supply chain. The final project is to help Bruno and his friends design an advertising campaign for a fair and sustainable chocolate product.

Lesson Materials