Calling all ‘Circular Champions’ – Aussie kids invited to ‘Think Outside the Bottle’ in national primary schools’ competition

Claire Halliday
Claire Halliday
Recycled plastic bottles create cute hanging planters.

Fair go, respect, inclusion and mateship…working collaboratively in a team. These are the values primary school children are being encouraged to demonstrate in a national schools’ challenge to create an innovative way of re-using plastic bottles – with $20,000 worth of classroom stationery prizes up for grabs.

The competition is part of the popular nationwide Aussie of the Month Award – a student recognition program that rewards the characteristics of personal endeavour, teamwork and contribution to community, and is the younger sibling to the prestigious Australian of the Year Awards.

Circular Champions is a great way for school children to demonstrate the important values of mateship, inclusion, respect, fair go and community, by showing how they can work together to get creative with plastic bottles that would otherwise end up in landfill.  I am very much looking forward to seeing the entries,” says Aussie of the Month Ambassador, 2023 Australia’s Local Hero, Amar Singh, president and founder of the Turbans 4 Australia charity, which was launched in 2015 to help provide emergency goods and services to Australians experiencing financial hardship, food insecurity, homelessness and unemployment, whilst at the same time promoting multi-culturalism and religious tolerance. 

Aussie of the Month Ambassador Amar Singh founded the charity Turbans 4 Australia

By getting involved in this national competition, 20 lucky schools can win their share of RRP $20,000 worth of Pilot Pen classroom stationery prize packs, including gel pens, whiteboard markers, ballpoints, refills, erasable highlighters and Sellotape safety dispensers.

- Advertisement -

“We have been a proud partner of the Aussie of the Month program for 20 years this year and are delighted to support the schools by offering this prize,” says Jarrad Murray, head of marketing, Pilot Pen Australia.

“We’re also really thrilled to encourage children to contribute to the circular economy by saving on plastic waste as part of our ongoing commitment to encourage people to refill their pens when the ink finishes.”

The Aussie of the Month program recognises outstanding contribution to the primary school community and broader society, and rewards students who display values such as respect, inclusion, mateship and a fair go. All participating schools receive Aussie of the Month certificates, lapel pins and Pilot Pen stationery prizes. The Aussie of the Month program is delivered by the Australia Day Council national network in partnership with the Department of Home Affairs.

Thinking outside the bottle aims to encourage school students to think about recycling and how they use plastic in the first place.

“We are delighted to be supporting this exciting initiative as part of the popular Aussie of the Month program, which gives recognition to students for their participation and contribution to the community.” says Mark Fraser, chief executive officer, National Australia Day Council.

- Advertisement -

Circular Champions opens on 22 July and closes on 20 September 2024.

To enter, schools can register for Aussie of the Month and prepare their class entry

Share This Article
Claire Halliday has an extensive career as a full-time writer - across book publishing, copywriting, podcasting and feature journalism - for more than 25 years. She lives in Melbourne with children, two border collies and a grumpy Burmese cat. Contact: claire.halliday[at]brandx.live