logo
Ayrshire pupils are stars of the show as they share recycling plans at Glasgow conference

Ayrshire pupils are stars of the show as they share recycling plans at Glasgow conference

Daily Record29-05-2025
The pupils spoke about steps their schools have taken to tackle waste and improve recycling.
A number of East Ayrshire primary school pupils were the stars of the recent ASSIST FM Conference, held at the Crowne Plaza in Glasgow.
Alfie and Jack from Catrine Primary, along with Jessica, Lily and Ilaria from Fenwick Primary as well as teachers Mrs Eccleston and Vicky McWilliam were invited by Mark Hunter, Vice Chair of ASSIST, the Scottish local authority catering organisation, to share the work taking place to reduce food waste and increase recycling across East Ayrshire.
Ms McWilliam, Principal Teacher of Climate Change and Active Travel, supported by Cairey the Caddy, gave a presentation on the Dinnae forget your Caddy initiative, which encourages children, young people and their local communities to recycle food waste at home.
Jessica, Lily and Ilaria spoke about the Clean Plates initiative at Fenwick Primary which encourages children and young people to not waste food at lunchtime.
The Clean Plates chart monitors their food waste and pupils with clean plates collect a house point. They also spoke about their work within their community encouraging food waste recycling and a joint initiative with local community magazine 'The Covenanter' that makes it easy for people to order an inside and outside food caddy from the Council.
Alfie and Jack delivered a presentation on the Education Waste Review, which has encouraged all schools in East Ayrshire to look at ways of increasing recycling and reducing residual waste.
They both explained that an education officer visited their school and helped them to maximise recycling opportunities.
Alfie and Jack said: 'Each school is looking at their processes and how they can be improved, but it only works if everyone who comes into our schools does their part. At Catrine Primary all the staff, pupils and especially our janitor, are amazing and it really helps to make us the best at recycling.'
They concluded that as a result of the review, the Council is saving over £15,000 annually.
Councillor Graham Barton, Spokesperson for Planning, Property and Environment, said: 'I was so pleased to hear that our young people had been invited to speak at the ASSIST conference.
'They have great news to share from East Ayrshire on the different initiatives that are helping to reduce food waste, increase recycling and promote sustainable waste management.
'Well done to Alfie and Jack and Jessica, Lily and Ilaria - they really were wee stars.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Which books are on the Nationals English reading list for 2025
Which books are on the Nationals English reading list for 2025

Scotsman

time3 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Which books are on the Nationals English reading list for 2025

Scotland's school reading list recently got a bit of a refresh 📚 Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Scottish English teachers mostly get to choose their own books for their National 5 pupils But there is a set list of Scottish texts – of which they must choose one to teach This list has undergone some big changes since the last academic year Many familiar classics have stuck around on despite recent changes to Scotland's Nationals English reading list, but this year's pupils will see some new additions too. Schoolchildren across Scotland are currently in the final days of their summer holidays, with the new 2025/26 school year beginning within the next week or two in most parts of the country. This will mean big changes for many young learners, including starting at a new primary or secondary school, or beginning to work towards important qualifications like their 'Nationals' – or National 5s. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Similarly to their counterparts across the UK, most pupils studying towards these qualifications have a few set subjects they'll probably have to take – namely English and maths. As parents might expect, the English National involves a fair amount of reading. Teachers in Scotland generally have the freedom to choose most of what their students will read, but they do have to choose at least one Scottish book, play, or poetry collection from an official set list. This list was recently switched up too, with some texts removed, and other new ones added. The Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) said that the changes came after multiple rounds of consultations with teachers, learners, experts and focus groups, and its English head Robert Quinn said the feedback they got was clear. 'Teachers and lecturers wanted to retain the most popular texts, but they also wanted a list that is diverse, and relevant for learners. Many of the old classics have stuck around on Scotland's reading list, but there have been some new additions too | (Image:/Adobe Stock) 'They wanted us to include more writers of colour, more female writers, more LGBTQ+ writers, and writers from a variety of backgrounds,' he continued. 'From learners we heard them say they wanted to see more modern and diverse texts that had challenging themes and strong emotional content included in the revised list.' This year's Nationals candidates will be the first to learn from the new list, so the books they have to read may look a little different from even other students who have recently completed the course. Here is the list they'll be reading from in the upcoming, 2025 school year: Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Drama Yellow Moon, by David Greig Sailmaker, by Alan Spence Tally's Blood, by Ann Marie di Mambro Prose Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, by Robert Louis Stevenson Duck Feet (*specifically Part Wan First Year), by Ely Percy - written in Scots A collection of short stories, by Anne Donovan (including All that Glisters, Hieroglyphics, Me and the Babbie, Loast) A collection of Scottish short stories (A Voice Spoke to me at Night by Helen McClory; Things My Wife and I Found Hidden in Our House by Kirsty Logan; Andrina by George Mackay Brown; Death In A Nut as told by Duncan Williamson) Poetry If your child's teacher chooses poetry, pupils will study six poems – either by a single Scottish poet, or a collection by several different writers. Carol Ann Duffy (Originally; Mrs Midas; In Mrs Tilscher's Class; Medusa; Havisham; Before You Were Mine) Norman MacCaig (Aunt Julia; Hotel room, 12th floor; Basking shark; On Lachie's Croft; Landscape and I; Old Highland Woman) Jackie Kay (Gap Year; Keeping Orchids; Whilst Leila Sleeps; Grandpa's Soup; Darling; Maw Broon Visits a Therapist) A set collection of Scottish poems (The Bonnie Earl o' Moray (traditional ballad); The Twa Corbies (traditional ballad); A Red, Red Rose by Robert Burns; Lochinvar by Sir Walter Scott; Auntie by Nadine Aisha Jassat; Little Girls by Len Pennie) To mark the recent SQA Nationals and Highers exam results day, we've also taken a look at some of Scotland's best-performing secondary schools – using the latest available data on pupils earning a wide range of qualifications. Find out which schools came out on top online here.

Ancient gold ring which depicts the 'power and emotion' of love enters Scotland's national collection
Ancient gold ring which depicts the 'power and emotion' of love enters Scotland's national collection

Scotsman

time6 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Ancient gold ring which depicts the 'power and emotion' of love enters Scotland's national collection

The precious posy ring was found my a metal detectorist in Argyll and Bute. Sign up to our History and Heritage newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... A gold posy ring which depicts the 'power and emotion' of love and was discovered buried in a field at least 400 years after it was made has entered the national collection. The posy ring, which dates from the 16th to 17th Century, was discovered by a metal detectorist in Cardross, Argyll and Bute. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It has now been acquired by National Museums Scotland after the ring was allocated by the Treasure Trove system, which determines where ownerless artefacts should be held. Dr Georgia Vullinghs, curator of Renaissance and Early Modern Scottish History at NMS, said the ring carried a rare inscription of two overlapping hearts that was embedded between the words 'Gife parted in paine' - if parted, in pain. Dr Vullinghs said: 'Posy rings overall are really beautiful personal objects that give us a glimpse of the emotional lives of people in Scotland from the past Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Posy rings are very much objects associated with love, with courtship , with relationships between two people and that inscription is usually loving. 'We don't see the illustration of hearts very often, we do have a posy ring with a single heart in the collection. 'A lot of them have the undertone of pain and sadness and I think they really emphasise the power of the emotion of love.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Dr Vullinghs said the ring would join other posy rings in the collection with the items coming up 'fairly frequently' due to metal detecting. The finder will be paid £1,100 for the posy ring, which was likely decorated with traces of a light blue enamel. Dr Vullinghs said: 'They are precious objects, they are made of gold, they are certainly a form of luxury. 'They are owned by people such as wealthy merchants, burgesses, landowners so we are not talking about the most noble or aristocratic parts of society. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad READ MORE: A Scottish love token which became a Native American emblem 'We are talking about a wider spread of Scottish society and because they are often found by metal detectorists, we know that the spread of these finds is pretty wide across the country , especially through the southern parts and up the east coast. 'When we are talking about these objects, we are talking about a shared experience across Scotland.' Dr Vullinghs said the rings were usually inscribed with 'often fairly standard phrases' which may have come from poems or texts of the time. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad However, it remains unclear what stage of a relationship a posy ring was gifted. Dr Vullinghs said: 'It is not clear if it is specifically to do with marriage . Especially post-Reformation, the exchange of rings is not mentioned in the liturgy around the marriage ceremony. It doesn't seem to be presented at a legal moment, but it doesn't mean it wasn't customary. 'It is something that I would like to do a bit more work on, to understand the actual moment of use of these objects. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'I think the rings served as a type of promise. Even if it is not necessarily presented in the ceremony of marriage, it could still be around a moment of bethroyal or promises made.

Warning Scotgov seabird plan 'like plaster on gaping wound'
Warning Scotgov seabird plan 'like plaster on gaping wound'

The Herald Scotland

time6 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Warning Scotgov seabird plan 'like plaster on gaping wound'

But the RSPB described is as a 'sticking plaster to a gaping wound' - as it comes two weeks after a controversial offshore windfarm was approved. The Berwick Bank farm is predicted to have 4.1 GW of installed capacity and be capable of generating renewable energy to power over six million homes However, the RSPB estimates it would also lead to the deaths of thousands of seabirds. How the Berwick Bank windfarm may look (Image: SSE) Anne McCall, Director of RSPB Scotland said: 'The seabird conservation action plan was meant to be a moment of hope for Scotland's iconic and struggling seabirds. But the decision to consent Berwick Bank has changed that. This plan now looks like applying a sticking plaster to a gaping wound. "Done right, offshore wind and seabirds can coexist, but it's difficult to convey the damage that is predicted to be done by this one, devastating project. Seabirds are already on the brink, Berwick Bank could push them over the edge – quickening some species toward extinction in Scotland. 'The Scottish Government has said positive words about saving seabirds. But it is actions, not words, that nature needs. It's hard to see how the Scottish Government can claim to be safeguarding our seabirds when decisions like this are taken without any detail on what urgent measures will be delivered where and when.' The Scottish Seabird Conservation Action Plan sets out a range of steps to stop the decline seen among seabirds in recent years, including enhancing food availability by improving conditions for prey, and minimising bycatch and tackling marine litter. It would also providine safe nesting areas by eradicating non-native invasive predators such as brown rats and American mink and undertak key research and monitoring of Scottish seabirds to understand how to build resilience and reduce mortality rates The action plan was developed in partnership with NatureScot, Joint Nature Conservation Committee, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and British Trust for Ornithology. Scotland is home to iconic seabirds (Image: NQ) Cabinet Secretary for Climate Action Gillian Martin said: 'The climate crisis, invasive non-native species, marine litter and access to food are contributing to declining seabird numbers around the world. Publishing the Scottish Seabird Conservation Action Plan today marks a vital step forward in protecting some of our most iconic and vulnerable marine species and sets out actions to collectively tackle pressures affecting seabirds. 'I'm confident that with concerted effort and shared responsibility, we can stop the declines we are seeing in our seabird populations and increase their resilience to a changing climate to secure their future. 'As top predators, seabirds are indicators of the health of marine ecosystems, playing a crucial role in maintaining balance within marine food webs. Seabirds also have a significant role in the economy supporting a thriving tourism industry that is vital to local economies, particularly in rural and island communities.' She added: 'Only by working together can we ensure that Scotland remains a global stronghold for seabirds for the benefit of us all, now and in the future.' Scottish Seabird Centre CEO Harry Huyton said: "From the great gannet colonies on St Kilda and Bass Rock, to the puffin burrows that crowd the grassy slopes of Unst and the Isle of May, Scotland is blessed with extraordinary seabird populations. 'Many are of international importance, yet most seabird species in Scotland are in decline, and urgent, transformative action is needed to save them. 'The ambition and actions set out in the new Seabird Action Plan are exactly what's needed, but it's critical that they are now delivered with urgency and fully embedded across Government."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store