Girls out to nix all nurdles
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After four weeks studying ecology, Cristina Waterman became an
opponent of nurdles.
Nurdles, the 11-year-old Waterman explained, are bits of plastic
that sea animals and birds can mistake for food.
“Birds eat plastic, and it chokes them,” Cristina said. “Dolphins
and sea lions are really cute, and they do not deserve to be killed
by us. Same with birds.”
Cristina was one of 60 girls who participated in four weeks of
science study with Girls Inc. of Orange County’s Eureka Program. Lucy
Santana, executive director of Girls Inc. of Orange County, said
girls in the Eureka Program learn about a different aspect of science
each year. This was the first time her group worked with the Costa
Mesa-based Earth Resource Foundation.
Members of the foundation wanted to teach the girls the value of
environmental stewardship and to impart the sense that their actions
have consequences, youth program coordinator Candice Dickens-Russell
said.
Dickens-Russell said the motto of the lessons is: “I am the
problem, and I am the solution.”
The girls concentrated their studies on three of
environmentalists’ traditional targets -- litter, Styrofoam and
plastics. The girls split into three groups to prepare presentations
on each topic.
They delivered their presentations Thursday at Orange Coast
College. Each included a slide show, featuring images of wildlife
harmed by litter. Those images included a seal with a plastic
six-pack ring around its snout and a turtle that tried to eat a
plastic bag.
In another presentation, the girls showed a video of their efforts
to try to persuade grocery shoppers to use paper bags instead of
plastic ones. Many shoppers walked right past the girls, but Santana
said the exercise went better than the moments shown on tape.
The girls also secured a pledge from Santana to declare Girls Inc.
a Styrofoam-free zone.
One of the three groups chose to focus on Styrofoam since they
found so much of the material at a beach cleanup, 12-year-old Nicole
Steinberg said.
“We had to yell out ‘Add more Styrofoam’ whenever we found 10
pieces. That’s all we said all day,” Nicole said.
Girls Inc.’s Eureka Program is open to girls 11 to 14, Santana said. The program is designed for girls who may one day study math,
science or technology at the college level.
“It’s so girls feel they belong on a college campus and those
subjects aren’t scary,” Santana said.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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