Climate Action Lab
An 8‑Week Student Leadership Pilot for Middle School Cafeterias
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Turn Earth Day energy into sustained, student‑led cafeteria change in your middle schools.
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Climate Action Lab is designed for:
- District sustainability, operations, and green schools leaders who want strong student participation in middle school cafeterias, not just elementary school
- Middle school administrators and site leaders who see the cafeteria as a space for real student leadership
- Student leadership advisors and community partners supporting climate clubs, green teams, or service programs
Program participants:
- Student teams of about 6–12 middle school students per school
- Each team has an on‑campus adult sponsor (teacher, advisor, or staff member) who supports students between sessions
- Lab sessions are student‑only; sponsors receive guidance and updates but do not attend the weekly Labs
For a first cohort, a strong starting point is:
7th grade student teams who experienced share tables or composting in elementary school and are ready for visible leadership in middle school cafeterias.
What’s included
- 8 weeks of live, online, after‑school Labs for student teams
- Weekly 60‑minute student‑only sessions on Zoom
- A shared cohort of 3–5 middle schools, so students learn from peers in other buildings
- Simple between‑session actions to design, run, and refine a real cafeteria campaign during lunch
- Clear structure that builds four layers of leadership:
- Identity & agency
- Behavior change design
- Real‑world action
- Impact and storytelling
Timeline
- Program length:Â 8 weeks
- When:Â 5 weeks in April + 3 weeks in May
- Start date: Cohort begins by April 1
- Session format: Weekly 60‑minute live session after school (student‑only)
- Fit with calendar: Designed to turn Earth Day energy into sustained, student‑led cafeteria change
Student outcomes
By the end of the Lab, participating students will:
- See themselves as leaders in the cafeteria, not just participants
- Design and run at least one real campaign during lunch at their school
- Apply basic behavior change tools (social norms, friction, incentives)
- Measure a baseline and track changes over time
- Create a short Impact Story documenting what they tried, what worked, and what they’ll change next
- Practice communication, teamwork, and persistence in a visible, real‑world setting
Cafeteria outcomes
Each school’s team chooses its own focus so it’s meaningful to students. Common campaign goals include:
- Reducing edible food waste (e.g., through share tables, smarter portion choices, or pre‑ordering)
- Improving composting or recycling behavior during lunch
- Increasing participation in existing cafeteria sustainability programs
Across the cohort, schools can expect:
- A clear before/after snapshot for their chosen issue
- At least one student‑designed, student‑run test of cafeteria behavior change
- Practical insights about what actually engages middle school students in their cafeterias
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Session‑by‑session breakdown
Week 1 – Identity, Agency & Focus
Goal: “I see myself as a leader who can act.”
- Welcome & orientation
- What leadership is (behavior, not titles)
- Why the cafeteria is a leadership space
- Each team chooses one cafeteria issue to focus on
- Decide how they will measure a baseline
Week 2 – Behavior Change Design
Goal: “I know how change actually happens.”
- Share baseline findings
- Why most awareness campaigns don’t change behavior
- Behavior change basics: social norms, friction, incentives
- Design a small, safe test to run during lunch
Weeks 3–5 – Action Sprint
Goal: “I did something real – and it worked (or I learned why it didn’t).”
- Weekly check‑ins on what was tested at lunch
- Real‑time problem‑solving and adaptation
- Ongoing measurement of the chosen outcome
- Focus on rapid testing, not perfection
Weeks 6–7 – Proof, Impact & Story
Goal: “I can prove my leadership to others.”
- Compare results to baseline
- Reflect on what they learned as leaders
- Draft each team’s Impact Story
- Create a simple way to share it (short presentation, graphic, or school blurb)
Week 8 – Graduation & Next Steps
Goal: “My leadership is visible and part of something bigger.”
- Teams share their results with the cohort
- Certificates and recognition for students
- Discussion of “what’s next” for each school’s cafeteria
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Spring pilot pricing:
- 1–2 schools: $1,900 per school
- 3‑school cohort: $5,500 total
- Up to 5 schools in one cohort:Â $9,000 total
A practical way to begin is with a 3‑school pilot cohort to test the model in your context before expanding.
Interested in a Spring pilot?
Schedule a 20‑minute conversation to:
- Understand your current cafeteria sustainability work
- Identify which schools and grades are the best fit for a first cohort
- Decide whether a 3‑ or 5‑school pilot makes the most sense