Green Star! newsletter
Bi-monthly themed newsletter for grades K-7 students and teachers
Up until June 2008 we were publishing bi-monthly Green Star! newsletters. Due to a number of constraints we are not currently able to produce any. However, there is still a lot of fun and interesting information to gain by looking at our archived newsletters available here.
Inside the newsletter, you'll find lots of information on the different plants and animals that live in British Columbia, environmental groups you can get involved with, events going on near your home, neat web links, and much, much, more.
Click here to download the Lesson Plans associated with each edition of the Green Star! newsletter.
Green Star! Newsletters
![]() May & June 2008 |
![]() April 2008 |
March 2008 World Water Day, Freshwater, B.C. Lakes and American White Pelican |
May & June 2007 Southern Interior Mountains, Endangered Species, and Mountain Caribou |
March & April 2007 Grasslands, Southern Interior, California Bighorn Sheep and Prickly Pear Cactus |
January & February 2007 Refuse, the 3Rs, the Taiga Plains, and Boreal Chorus Frogs |
November & December 2006 Clean Air, Clean Water, the Coast & Mountains, and Gray Wolves |
May & June 2006 Food & transportation, the Georgia Depression, and Northern Alligator Lizards |
March & April 2006 Earth Day, the Sub-boreal Interior, and the Little Brown Myotis |
Resources and Energy, the Northern Boreal Mountains, and Arctic Terns |
November & December 2005 Healthy Homes, the Taiga & Boreal Plains, and Wolverines |
April & May 2005 Earth Day, Habitats, the Southern Interior Mountains, and Painted Turtles |
February & March 2005 Wetlands, the Sub-boreal Interior, and Sandhill Cranes |
September & October 2004 Renewable Energy, the Georgia Depression, and Rockfish |
April & May 2004 Earth Day, School Gardening, the Central & Southern Interior, and Burrowing Owls |
January & February 2004 Climate Change, Boreal Forests, and Woodland Caribou |
October & November 2003 Salmon, Watersheds, Coastal Temperate Rainforests, and Kermode Bears |








