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Being green is hip. And taking quizzes online appeals to the inner procrastinator in most of us. So it comes as no surprise that many, many groups have paired the two, creating what seems to be a 鈥渉ow green are you鈥 quiz bonanza.
No joke. Quick Google searches of the phrases 鈥済reen quiz鈥 and 鈥渉ow green are you?鈥 returned a combined 250 million results. You can test your global warming know-how, for example, . On the to find out whether you鈥檙e a 鈥渃hampion鈥 or another of 16 different eco-titles.
This quiz-mania recently came to my attention when I stumbled upon , which tallies an individual鈥檚 green-ness on a scale of 0 to 100, based on answers to 20 easy questions. Created by husband-and-wife duo Lynate Pettengill and Curt Shontz, the quiz intends to 鈥渕otivate people in a fun, light way to make green changes in their lives,鈥 according to Pettengill.
Sounds good to me. Let鈥檚 see how green I am. 鈥淒o you recycle 25 percent of the time? Do you use your own bags when you go to the store?鈥 Yes and yes! I must be pretty green. Moving on: 鈥淚s 25 percent or more of your food purchased from local food sources? Do you use all-natural, non-toxic cleaning products in your home?鈥 Um, no and no. Hmmm.
I scored a 49.
In almost every instance, 49 out of 100 equals failure. But I didn鈥檛 feel bad about my results because GoGreenScore.org isn鈥檛 preachy. It鈥檚 simple and quick and makes its point in a light-hearted way. And of the six online tests I took, GoGreenScore.org was the most user-friendly.
A few things to keep in mind, however, if you take this quiz鈥攐r any of these brain busters, for that matter: Who鈥檚 sponsoring the site? (Companies owned by Pettengill and Shontz, for instance, sponsor and fund their quiz.) How reliable is the information? (Both Pettengill and Shontz say they are life-long environmentalists, but neither has a background in environmental science. Their answers, gathered by Pettengill and volunteers, do, however, come from reputable sources such as the and the .)
These caveats don鈥檛 mean that quizzes like GoGreenScore.org aren鈥檛 worth five minutes of your time. But they do remind me not to blindly accept online eco-advice.