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World environment day: 5 activities for kids to learn sustainability the fun way

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Jun 5, 2025, 05:31 IST
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How can kids celebrate earth day

Every year on June 5, World Environment Day gives a chance to reconnect with nature and remind ourselves of the little changes that can make a big difference. While the topic of “sustainability” may sound too heavy for young minds, the truth is — children absorb values through actions more than words. They mirror what they see. And there is no better time than childhood to sow the seeds of eco-friendly habits.

Instead of boring lectures or just planting a sapling, here are 5 meaningful and creative activities that help children live the idea of sustainability, not just learn about it. Each one is designed to inspire, to bond, and to leave behind lasting impressions — for both the little ones and the grown-ups guiding them.

2/6

The "trash-to-treasure" challenge at home

Sorting waste is important, but it doesn’t teach why items should be reused or how much value lies in old things.

A more engaging idea? Turn waste into something beautiful. Think of it as a weekly home challenge — maybe an old T-shirt becomes a tote bag, or a plastic bottle becomes a self-watering planter. Let the child lead the project. Choose a theme: “Make something useful from kitchen trash.” This teaches not just reuse, but creativity, patience, and respect for materials. And when that recycled toy or holder gets a permanent place in the house, it becomes a little badge of pride.

3/6

One week of “no-packaging” meals

Children don’t understand packaging waste unless they experience how much it surrounds them.

Instead, spend one week creating meals with zero plastic packaging — no biscuits in wrappers, no ready-made sauces, not even bread in plastic bags. Go to a local sabzi mandi (vegetable market), carry cloth bags, and involve the child in choosing produce. Cook together using only unpackaged items. Let the child count how many wrappers were avoided. This small step opens their eyes to the hidden plastics in everyday food. It’s not about guilt, it’s about awareness.

4/6

Create a family “green diary” together

These are wonderful ideas, but without reflection, children might see them as just chores.

A “Green Diary” becomes a space where every family member can write or draw something about the planet — a bird spotted on a walk, a dry leaf turned into art, or even questions like, “Where does soap go after we wash it away?” Keep it personal. Don’t worry about grammar or spelling. Every page becomes a quiet moment with nature, and over time, the diary becomes a treasured record of growing consciousness.

5/6

Let children fix or repair something that’s broken

Donating is good, but it doesn’t explain how things can last longer or be fixed before being discarded.

A small sewing kit, a bottle of glue, or just some tape can be magical in tiny hands. Choose one broken thing at home and say, “Let’s try to fix this before we throw it.” Maybe it’s a torn pillow, a broken earring, or a leaky tap (with help, of course). Even if it’s not perfect, the child learns that not everything is disposable. The act of fixing teaches responsibility, patience, and love for things owned. It also fosters problem-solving — a life skill that is deeply connected with sustainable thinking.

6/6

Adopt a local patch: Become ‘caretakers’ of a street corner

Nature walks are calming, but passive. Children often remain observers, not protectors.


Instead, pick one patch of land — maybe a dusty park corner or even a neglected sidewalk — and “adopt” it. Visit it weekly, clean up wrappers, water any plants, maybe even start adding pebbles or flowers. Over time, the child starts seeing that spot as their own — a space they helped change. It teaches ownership, not just awareness. And that’s when sustainability truly starts to matter to young minds.


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