News

Primary School Students Gather on A-State Campus for Earth Day Celebration

Primary School Students Gather on A-State Campus for Earth Day Celebration

Photo: Saga Communications/Rachel Rudd


Jonesboro, AR – JonesboroRightNow.com – Around 200 grade school students from across Northeast Arkansas gathered on the Arkansas State University campus to celebrate Earth Day and learn about sustainability.

The event, held on the lawn in front of the Reng Student Union, featured several booths where kids could learn about wildlife, sustainability, conservation, and more. It invites schools within a 100-mile radius of A-State to attend, as well as homeschooled kids. It has been held for 15 years.

“It’s fun for the kids to see all the different animals here because it’s not things that they would normally see,” said Dr. Jennifer Bouldin, dean of the Beck College of Science and Mathematics. “If you teach somebody at a young age, how important it is to recycle, how important it is to conserve things, then they’ll take it into their adulthood.”

In addition to the various booths, art displays by students made from recyclable materials were on display on the second floor of the Union. Sponsored by the Keep Jonesboro Beautiful Commission and Unico Bank, the display encouraged students to work with the theme “Our Power, Our Planet.”

ADD US ON GOOGLE NEWS: Click here to see more local news from Jonesboro Right Now

Wynne Primary School second graders Lilly Jacobs and Eleanor Grubbs attended the festival. They both said their favorite booth was the Northeast Arkansas Humane Society’s, which had puppies for students to pet.

“We’ve learned today not to push trash in the ocean, so we can’t pollute the animals and things,” Grubbs said. Jacobs added, “We learned not to litter so we can keep animals safe.”

Anna Paraskevopoulos, who was with the Arkansas Center for Biodiversity Collections, was working at a booth where students could see live insects and learn how they prefer different flowers.

Their booth was next to the Red Wolves for Red Wolves, an A-State student organization that advocates for and educates on red wolf conservation. There, students could feel a real red wolf pelt and learn about the animals.

“I think they just really like seeing the specimens and being able to touch things. I think it’s really exciting to have a red wolf pelt out as well as some other study specimens,” Paraskevopoulos said. “Trying to teach students about biodiversity, and all the different organisms, and how they make up each component of the ecosystem, and the overall impact of that is really important.”

| DAILY BRIEF: Sign up for the Jonesboro Right Now Daily Brief Newsletter

This Week in Jonesboro

Recent Headlines

2 hours ago in Entertainment

Man pleads guilty to Atlanta auto break-in that led to theft of unreleased music by Beyoncé

Kelvin Evans, 41, entered guilty pleas in Fulton County Superior Court to entering an automobile and criminal trespass. He was sentenced to two years in prison, according to news outlets. He was scheduled to go on trial this week.

3 hours ago in Sports, Trending

30 days out, Los Angeles is ready for the World Cup. The playing surface? Not just yet

The U.S. men open at SoFi Stadium (to be known as Los Angeles Stadium) against Paraguay on June 12, the first of eight matches to be played at the NFL stadium in Inglewood. The field was all dirt on Tuesday.

9 hours ago in Entertainment

Rick Riordan unveils new ‘Camp Half-Blood’ novels, starting this fall

Starting this fall, fans of Rick Riordan's "Percy Jackson" books can discover some adventures that took place at the demigod training facility Camp Half-Blood when Percy himself wasn't around.

10 hours ago in Entertainment, Music

Eurovision song competition starts with the first semifinal after boycott over Israel

Competition starts Tuesday at the Eurovision Song Contest, with divisions over Israel's participation hanging over the 70th birthday of the over-the-top pop music extravaganza.

1 day ago in Lifestyle

Pediatricians group finds kids of all ages need regular recess for physical and mental health

Recess isn't just a fun break for grade schoolers. It's crucial to good health and good grades for kids of all ages. That's the message from a leading pediatricians group, which just released the first new guidance in 13 years about this unstructured time at school and how it needs to be protected.