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   Left to right: St Stephen's Primary School pupils Opeyemi Adebiyi 
                and Jenicka Nicholas, both ten, Sulivan Primary pupil Mohamad 
                Chahine, ten,
 Sulivan teacher Mandy Wilson, London Mayor Ken Livingstone, Sulivan 
                Primary pupil Ava Crawford
 and St Stephen's Primary learning
 mentor Natasha Joahill.
 
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                Mayor 
                  of London Ken Livingstone presented on Thursday, April 22, Sulivan 
                  Primary School and St Stephen's Church of EnglandPrimary School with cash prizes for their work for the local 
                  environment in the London Schools Environment Awards.
 
 Sulivan Primary School won a distinction award of £2000 
                  and St Stephen's Church of England Primary School won a highly 
                  commended award of £1000. Wildlife presenter Bill Oddie 
                  hosted the awards ceremony and the winners were entertained 
                  with a performance by Eurovision and Fame
 academy star James Fox.
 
 Mandy Wilson, year five teacher at Sulivan Primary, said: "We 
                  collect waste paper and card in recycling bins provided by the 
                  council and have written an action plan for waste and recycling 
                  in the school. Children have been reducing the amount of packaging 
                  in their packed lunches and taking part in regular litter picking 
                  sessions in the playground and the school building. We have 
                  also organised a paper making session, where the children did 
                  their own pulping and recycling, with the help of parents and 
                  relatives."
 
 In partnership with Capital Standards and sponsored by Cleanaway 
                  and EDF Energy, the awards have been developed to foster children's 
                  sense of responsibility for their environment and the categories 
                  which the
 schools focused on were - litter, waste and recycling, energy, 
                  transport and biodiversity. The children learned about the need 
                  to reduce, re-use and recycle waste and to save energy at home 
                  and at school. They were taught about biodiversity and learnt 
                  about a variety of plants, animals and habitats.
 
 Two schools from each of the participating boroughs received 
                  the awards. 570 schools and 210,000 children in London took 
                  part in the scheme.
 
 Ken Livingstone said: ''These awards have really put the environment 
                  on the agenda in London's schools and this is the first time 
                  for many years that London children are learning about the real 
                  problem of litter and about keeping their environment clean. 
                  Children have got involved in a whole manner of ways -by carrying 
                  out litter surveys and involving their parents by getting them 
                  to sign anti-litter pledges and by improving recycling rates 
                  in their schools by poster campaigns and recycling collections. 
                  They have been planning and building wildlife, vegetable and 
                  herb gardens to better understand ecosystems and different habitats 
                  and they have shown a sound knowledge of conservation and the 
                  problem of climate change.'
 
 
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 Pupils at Sulivan Primary School were also visited last Thursday, 
                April 29, by Waste Watch's Cycler,
 the rapping robot.
 
 Supported by Biffaward and in co-operation with the Rethink Rubbish 
                Western Riverside campaign, Cycler taught children how they can 
                tackle rubbish through reducing, reusing and recycling their rubbish.
 The 
                school sessions feature the robot dancing and rapping about recycling. 
                Accompanied by an Education Officer from Waste Watch, Cycler's 
                highly interactive show was fun and full of facts. It forms part 
                of a national environmental education programme run by Waste Watch. 
                An activity book full of puzzles is provided for follow-up exercises 
                after the show to maximise the show's educational impact. Vicki 
                Stevens, Education Officer for Waste Watch, said, "Every 
                household in the UK throws away just over one tonne of rubbish 
                per year, of which around 75% could be reused or recycled to avoid 
                wasting valuable resources. Cycler raps and talks to the children 
                about this. They quickly learn the message and soon join in - 
                it's a message they'll also enjoy taking home!" 
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