3. Schools have a responsibility to
teach health and nutrition.
The wellbeing of children, both now and in the
future, is affected by their diet and the maintenance of a healthy
weight. Schools can reinforce healthful eating behaviours from a
young age, both in and out of the cafeteria. But this opportunity
is being missed, and the rise in obesity has been accompanied
by a decrease in the number of alternative food options available
at schools, a decline in the quality of food served and a lack of
food education.
While lots of schools around the world provide food education and
great meals in the cafeteria, there are so many schools that need to
change drastically. We need to replace processed and junk food
with fresh meals, cooked from scratch by properly trained cooks
in well-equipped kitchens. We also need to bring food education
back into the classroom, so kids leave school armed with the skills
and knowledge to make the right food choices. Here are some
tips for bringing about change in your local schools.
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4. 1 Educate yourself
Get the facts about childhood obesity and how diet-related diseases impact your
country and your community. Learn the basics about school food in your local
area, whether schools provide lunch or not and what regulations are in place.
Remember every school is different, so youâll have to do a little digging to find out
what rules apply to schools in your country, state, city or district.
2 Find a core group of supporters
Find allies among parents, staff and community members. Talk to your PTA and find
out if there is already a Health and Wellness Committee or similar at your school.
Have a think about people within the school who can help, and also approach
outsiders such as local paediatricians, health experts and school nurses who can
share their expertise and provide an independent voice. Meet with your group
regularly to define your mission statement and core aims.
3 Get the facts on lunch in your local schools
If you can, eat lunch at your school and find out for yourself what is on the lunch
tray and what other food and drink is available during the day. Do an audit of
the school food to help create a clear picture of what exactly is happening: what
facilities there are, how long kids have to eat their lunch, what equipment the
school has, and what training and skills staff have.
4 Find out who is in charge
Youâll need the support of key people, so get in contact with them. They could be
the head teacher or principal of the school, the person in charge of school meals,
local politicians or even food suppliers. Youâll need to know who has the power to
make the changes to your food, who is supplying the meals, what the contract
situation is and who manages this contract.
5 Investigate the budget and constraints
Find out about the budget constraints your school is facing so you can be realistic
about the changes that are possible, and what you are up against in trying to
make them. But before you believe everything you hear about limited financial
resources for healthy school food, check out Kate Adamickâs book, Lunch Money:
Serving Healthy School Food in a Sick Economy, available at Amazon.
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5. PHOTO BY BEN GIBBS
6 Love your lunch ladies
Start with the people who can help make all this happen! Get in the kitchen and get
to know your lunch ladies. They should be involved every step of the way, so let them
know you are on their side and want to help. Talk with them about the current situation,
how things can improve and discuss any problems that need to be overcome to get
healthier, fresher food in the kitchen.
7 Get students on board
Students can often be the most powerful advocates in making change, so let them
know what is going on and why. see if you can create a student committee to form
and campaign for change, they could also talk to other students to see what they do
and donât like and what they would want to change. It is the kids that will be eating
the food, so itâs important to get their views and feedback.
8 Set goals and make a plan of actionable steps
Set out a wish list and identify some achievable goals to work towards. Put each
goal into actionable steps and include these goals in your school wellness policy,
set up regular meetings with your group to discuss progress. Youâll find that long-term
change is difficult but achievable â especially if you measure success incrementally,
so start small and think about removing or limiting flavored milks or something similar to
begin with.
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6. 9 Meet with school officials and get them onside
Wherever change starts, it will only be fully implemented with the support of the
stakeholders. The parent/teacher association and health and wellness committee
should approach your head teacher, food service director, council or district
board, superintendent and present your case to them. Have facts and figures to
hand, either from our resources or you own research, to show how things need to
change and why.
10 Develop a health and wellness policy that fits all
Once you have the support of the school and parents, you can start to work on a
policy to improve food and food education. Most schools will already have some
kind of policy in place, often known as a health and wellness policy. Find out what
is in your schoolâs policy and work out what needs to change or improve. If your
school doesnât have policy, draw one up to include all the things you would like to
see implemented.
11 Address suppliers
Get them involved â your kitchen is going to need quality, fresh, ingredients. Use this
as an opportunity to approach new suppliers and get competitive quotes. See if
you can find a local farm or producer that can supply seasonal fresh produce that
the supermarkets donât want. Thereâs always someone out there looking for new
business.
12 Keep spreading the message
Keep people motivated by raising the issue whenever you can, it is important to
get the support of the community and keep them involved. How you spread the
message depends on who you are talking to. Write a school blog, start a letter-
writing campaign, run surveys, send emails to parents, host meetings in community
places and ask key guests to speak. Take a whole school approach, get everyone
on board and broadcast why these food values are good for your school.
13 Raise money
A major barrier to change will always be funding. Have a think about what you
could raise money for; it could be equipment for a kitchen, wages for helpers,
or ingredients for cooking classes. Youâll also need to work out the best way to
do it. Work closely with the school administrators to make sure they are on board
with fundraising efforts, and remember that small investments can help make a big
change. Set yourself goals and let everyone know what you are fundraising for and
where their money will go.
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7. 14 Taste testers
Before you implement a new menu itâs really important to run taste testers for both
students and parents. You can let them know what is in the food, what changes have
been made and the nutritional benefits of new foods. Youâll also be able to gauge
what goes down well and what doesnât, so make sure you take in their feedback.
15 Provide training for teachers
Teachers will need information and training about the changes being made and why
they are important, so that they can help support them and incorporate them in their
lessons. Get some professionals in from time to time to help with this â whether health
professionals, chefs or lunch ladies, all these people can come and help educate
students and spread the word.
16 Get food in the classroom
Children should be learning about food in the classroom, not just when they eat. Find
out about the current curriculum and see how you can integrate food education into
this, whether itâs spelling ingredients in English classes, the basics of nutrition in science
or the impact climate has on vegetable growth in geography. Teachers should also
use assembly as time to talk about food education and the changes being made to
the menu.
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8. 17 Get cooking
Studies show that when kids take cooking classes, the likelihood of them eating a
greater variety and quantity of vegetables increases. It leads to more kids asking
for different foods at home and increases the likelihood of them trying the new
foods in the cafeteria. By teaching them how to cook youâll also be setting them up
with the skills needed to look after themselves for the rest of their lives.
18 Get smarter in the dining hall
It takes time to change school menus, but there are things you can do in the
meantime. Make the healthy foods look appealing and easy to access, push
the less healthy foods to be back and ask food service staff to recommend the
healthier options. Short meal periods also make it difficult to have a proper lunch,
and can mean that more students end up having snacks from vending machines,
so make sure access to dinner is easy and time efficient.
19 Lunchtime champions
Having volunteers during lunchtime can help encourage students to try the different
foods. Whether its lunch staff, teachers, parent volunteers or even other students
acting as lunch room champions, they can encourage students to try new foods
and explain why they are good and what is in them.
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9. 20 Serve fresh food
Make fresh, raw ingredients the basis of school meals. Donât cheat with processed
sauces, precooked meat or dried mixes. Make a point of always knowing what is
being served â how many ingredients do you recognise, and how many are adding
nutritional value to the food? Real food cooked fresh doesnât need additives,
preservatives or anything artificial.
21 Eat seasonal & local
Not only is this a great way to support your local community and educate kids on
seasonal foods, but fruit and veggies are usually cheaper and tastier when in season.
Get your school to eat local as often as is possible, even if it is only once a semester,
but serve seasonal foods all year round. You can also make a display of seasonal
foods and implement seasonality into food education in the classroom so kids know
what is in season when.
22 Focus on mealtimes
Assess what snacks and fast foods are available during the school day and how you
can limit these. Make sure that every child gets a proper meal for lunch (and breakfast
if you serve it), and time to sit down and enjoy it. Serve food to students on washable
plates and with proper cutlery.
23 Donât supersize
You need to make sure that you are giving kids suitably sized meals â not too big so
that they overeat and not too small so that they are hungry. Part of a proper meal
is ensuring that the quantity is right, so use age-based guidelines to ensure that
portions arenât too big or too small. Ensuring that portions arenât too big can also help
reduce waste.
24 Serve water
Having free water available through the school day is really important to help kids
keep hydrated. Fresh water is the best thirst quencher, plus itâs cheap and doesnât
contain any additives or added sugar. Although water is not always a popular choice
with kids, theyâll all be sure to drink it if it is available and advertised, and itâs much
better than flavored milks filled with added sugar and artificial flavourings
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10. 25 Grow something you can eat
Lots of kids are so out of touch with where their food comes from that they donât
actually know whether it is artificial or grown. A pot of herbs and a tomato plant
are enough to show kids how to make a salad and teach them the basics of mixing
ingredients and flavours. It also gives them a way to touch, feel and interact with
the food and understand where it comes from. If you can grow more and start a
garden at school, even better!
26 Connect with your local farms
Connect with your local farmers to see if they can supply fresh produce to your
school. This way you can use your school programme to support your local
community. See if you can also arrange field trips for students out to local farms or
farmers markets and show them where their food really comes from.
27 Measure the impact
Itâs important to prove that any changes make a difference, and to find out what
is working and what isnât. You could measure the impact on student health, work
out rates of obesity, absences and test scores, and compare them with before the
changes came in. To get others involved and keep them up to date, post stories
and pictures, blog about the changes and ask teachers to create school projects
that ask students how their approach to food is changing.
28 Make it fun!
Introduce some fun elements to get students involved. Thinking of initiatives that
relate to students is really important, and different techniques will work for different
age groups. For younger students, think about having a âColours of the Rainbowâ
day, where all the students have to make sure they have all the colours of the
rainbow on their plate â but remember all food needs to be natural, no artificial
additives allowed!
29 Tough love â donât give up
Remember that it takes time and patience to try something new and could take a
few weeks or even months for changes to come into effect. It will be tough and you
may face opposition, but just take it one step at a time, remind yourself of why you
are doing this, that it is important and that you can make a difference to the health
prospects of your kids.
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11. 30 Celebrate food!
Teach kids that food and cooking is fun and just how much you can do with food.
Celebrate holidays and events with great food, hold cooking classes for both kids
and their parents, involve the whole community in your campaign and remember to
celebrate successes.
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