Sustainable Development Goals
Abstract/Objectives
Woodworking experience camp activities primarily involve using naturally fallen camphor trees on the Tsinghua University campus to create one's own stool. This is not only a rich practical experience but also an excellent opportunity to deeply understand the concepts of recycling and environmental protection. Participants will learn basic woodworking skills and appreciate the regenerative value of fallen trees, allowing each tree to truly achieve a cradle-to-cradle cycle.
Results/Contributions

Event Overview:

A. Parent-child Ecological Tour Description:

Success Lake is a memory for Tsinghua alumni, whether it's taking a leisurely stroll by the lake after class, youthful memories of classmates' birthday celebrations, boating on the lake, or vivid memories of studying intertwined with Success Lake. However, if you slow down and observe carefully, you will find that Success Lake is also an important ecological habitat. For example, the little grebes diving from time to time on the lake, the kingfishers skimming low over the surface, the hoopoes flying in and out of the forest canopy, and the gradually rising frog calls as night falls...

This time, we have designed a campus ecological tour from a child's perspective, hoping to invite you and your children to sensitize to the touch, smell, and shape of a tree from a child's point of view; observe the plumage of little grebes and other waterbirds through a monocular telescope in a non-disruptive manner; and revisit the questions and observations about the flowers, grasses, and trees around you.

B. Woodworking Experience Description:

Do you know where the pruned or naturally fallen trees on the Tsinghua campus go? Welcome to participate in the unique woodworking experience camp at Tsinghua University, and bring Tsinghua campus trees back home! This special activity will allow parents and children to share a time filled with creativity and environmental spirit.

In the activity, parents and children will have the opportunity to make their own benches from the camphor trees that have naturally fallen within the Tsinghua University campus. This is not only a rich practical experience, but also an excellent opportunity to deepen the understanding of recycling and environmental protection concepts. Participants will learn the basics of woodworking techniques and also appreciate the regeneration value of fallen trees, enabling each tree to truly complete the cycle from cradle to cradle.

Keywords
Reusing Waste Wood
References
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Contact Information
張惠珍
hcchang@mx.nthu.edu.tw