Post Job Free
Sign in

School Education

Location:
Washington, DC
Posted:
January 09, 2013

Contact this candidate

Resume:

NATIONAL CENTER FOR EDUCATION STATISTICS

Survey Report July 1996

Nutrition Education in

Public Elementary and

Secondary Schools

Carin Celebuski

Elizabeth Farris

Westat, Inc.

Judi Carpenter

Project Officer

National Center for Education Statistics

U.S. Department of Education

Office of Educational Research and Improvement NCES 96-852

U.S. Department of Education U.S. Department of Agriculture

Richard W. Riley Dan Glickman

Secretary Secretary

Office of Educational Research and Improvement Ellen Haas

Sharon P. Robinson Under Secretary for Food, Nutrition, and

Assistant Secretary Consumer Services

National Center for Education Statistics Food and Consumer Service

Pascal D. Forgione, Jr. William E. Ludwig

Commissioner Administrator

Jeanne E. Griffith Office of Analysis and Evaluation

Associate Commissioner Michael E. Fishman

Acting Director

National Center for Education Statistics

"The purpose of the Center shall be to collect, and analyze,

and disseminate statistics and other data related to

education in the United States and in other nations."

Section 406(b) of the General Education Provisions Act, as

amended (20 U.S. C. 1221e-1).

July 1996

Contact:

Judi Carpenter

202-***-****

This report was prepared by Westat, Inc., under contract with the National Center for Education

Statistics and under a cooperative agreement with the Food and Consumer Service, U.S.

Department of Agriculture.

Practically all public schools (99 percent) offer nutrition

Highlights education somewhere within the curriculum, and many integrate it

within the total curriculum (70 percent). Nutrition education is

concentrated within the health curriculum (84 percent), science

classes (72 percent), and school health program (68 percent)

(table 1). Although nutrition education is an active area, the

intensity and quality of the nutrition messages students are

receiving is not known.

For each grade from kindergarten through eighth, 50 percent or

more of all schools have district or state requirements for students

to receive nutrition education. However, only 40 percent have

these requirements for ninth and tenth grades; and about 20

percent for eleventh and twelfth grades (figure 1).

Topics in nutrition covered by more than 90 percent of all schools

are: the relationship between diet and health, finding and choosing

healthy foods, nutrients and their food sources, the Food Guide

Pyramid, and the Dietary Guidelines and goals (table 4).

However, with the exception of the Food Guide Pyramid, less than

half of schools cover these topics thoroughly.

Overall, schools focus on increasing students knowledge about

what is meant by good nutrition, with less emphasis on influencing

students motivation, attitudes, and eating behaviors. Four of the

five topics covered by more than 90 percent of all schools are

related to knowledge. With the exception of finding and choosing

healthy foods, less than one-third of schools provide thorough

coverage of topics related to motivation, attitudes, and eating

behaviors (table 4).

Research has shown that schools or districts where the nutrition

education efforts are coordinated by a person or group have an

opportunity to present a more focused message to students about

the importance of healthy eating. However, the majority of

schools (61 percent) have no nutrition education coordination,

meaning each teacher is responsible for his or her own lessons

(table 6).

Most schools use materials developed by teachers in their schools

(90 percent), health or science textbooks (89 percent), and

materials developed for a specific grade level (83 percent) (table

10).

Ninety-seven percent of schools report receiving nutrition lesson

materials from at least one source outside the school, most often

from professional or trade associations (87 percent), and the food

industry (86 percent). However, for any given outside source,

only 37 percent or less of schools used all or

iii

most of the materials received. Of the materials from sources

outside the school, schools reported the highest classroom usage

for those received from the food industry or commodities groups,

professional or trade associations, the USDA Food and Nutrition

Information Center, and state education agencies (table 8).

Over 90 percent of all schools offer nutrition education through

the school meals program. Most information is offered through

bulletin boards with nutrition displays (65 percent) or during

school lunch week (51 percent). Less than half of school meals

programs offer nutrient information, serve meals to correspond

with classroom activities, give tours or provide nutrition input to

newsletters. Less than one quarter of school meals programs

provide nutrition education in the classroom or conduct tasting

parties (table 11).

Most respondents (84 percent) are of the opinion that the meals

programs in their schools follow generally healthy eating practices

(figure 5). Schools reporting that their meals programs follow

healthy eating practices are substantially more likely to be

involved in nutrition education activities than those that do not

report following them (table 14).

iv

Table of Contents

Page

Highlights iii

Introduction 1

Nutrition Education in the School Curriculum 4

Nutrition Education Topics 7

Coordination of Nutrition Education 10

Resources for Nutrition Education 13

Materials Used to Teach Nutrition 13

Sources of Materials 13

School Meals Program 15

Other Resources 19

Summary and Conclusions 20

List of Appendices

Appendix

A Survey Methodology and Data Reliability 23

B Tables of Standard Errors 31

C Survey Form 51

D U.S. Public Law 103-448. 103d Cong. 2 Nov. 1994. Child Nutrition

Act of 1966. Section 19(a) 57

v

List of Figures

Figure Page

1 Percent of public schools where nutrition is taught and where nutrition education

is required, by grade: 1995 5

2 Percent of public schools where nutrition is taught and where nutrition education

is required in at least one grade, by instructional level: 1995 7

3 Percent of coordinators with various highest levels of training in nutrition or a

nutrition-related area: 1995 12

4 Percent of public schools that report student and parent input into the meals

program, by geographic region: 1995 17

5 Percent of respondents who are of the opinion that their school meals program

follows generally healthy eating practices, by instructional level: 1995 18

6 Percent of public schools that use special events for nutrition education: 1995 19

vi

List of Tables

Table Page

1 Percent of public schools offering nutrition education within the school curriculum,

by school characteristics: 1995 4

2 Percent of public schools where nutrition is taught, by grade and geographic

region: 1995 6

3 Percent of public schools where nutrition education is required, by grade and

geographic region: 1995 6

4 Percent of public schools that cover various topics in nutrition education, the

percent that cover them thoroughly, and the percent for whom the topic

represents a main focus of nutrition education at their school: 1995 8

5 Percent of public schools that cover various topics in nutrition education, by

instructional level: 1995 9

6 Percent of public schools with various types of nutrition education coordination,

by school characteristics: 1995 11

7 Percent of public schools offering nutrition education within the school curriculum,

by person or group responsible for coordinating nutrition education: 1995 12

8 Percent of public schools that use various types of materials to teach nutrition

education, by instructional level: 1995 13

9 Percent of public schools that receive and use materials for nutrition education

from various sources: 1995 14

10 Percent of public schools that receive and use materials for nutrition education

from the Cooperative Extension Service, by school characteristics: 1995 15

11 Percent of public schools where the school meals program provides nutrition

education or coordinates with classroom efforts, by instructional level: 1995 16

12 Percent of public schools where the school meals program provides nutrition

education or coordinates with classroom efforts, by geographic region: 1995 16

13 Percent of public schools where the school meals program solicits input through

a student advisory group or pretesting new foods, by instructional level: 1995 17

14 Percent of public schools that report various meals program efforts, by

whether the respondent is of the opinion that their school meals program follows

generally healthy eating practices: 1995 19

vii

viii

Introduction The link between food and health has been well documented by

numerous studies and reports describing the impact of dietary intake

on disease prevention and health promotion. Dietary

recommendations and long-term health objectives, including the

Dietary Guidelines for Americans1 and the Year 2000 Health

Objectives for the Nation, 2 call for Americans to reduce intake of total

fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol; increase intake of fruits, vegetables,

grain products, and foods rich in calcium; and moderate intake of

sugars, salt, and alcohol.

Many Americans consume excess calories for their level of activity,

and have diets inconsistent with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans-

-too high in fat, sodium, and sugar, with not enough grains, fruits, and

vegetables. These unhealthy eating patterns may contribute to illness

and premature death in the long term.

Dietary factors are associated with 5 of the 10 leading causes

of death: coronary heart disease, some types of cancer,

stroke, noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, and

atherosclerosis.3

Because eating habits developed during childhood have the potential to

last a lifetime, it is important for children to learn about the benefits of

good nutrition. Therefore, the Child Nutrition Act of 1966 views

nutrition education as a matter of highest priority. 4 Its importance

is further addressed in Healthy People 2000, the list of health

objectives developed by the U.S. Public Health Service, in which the

public health community seeks, by the year 2000, to increase to at

least 75 percent the proportion of the Nation s schools that provide

nutrition education from preschool through 12th grade, preferably as a

part of quality school health education. Education to establish healthy

eating habits early in life can assure that individuals have the

information and skills they need to protect and enhance their own

health and the health of their families. 5

1

Dietary Guidelines for Americans. U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. Department of Health and Human

Services. Home and Garden Bulletin No. 232. Fourth Edition. 1995.

2

Healthy People 2000: National Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Objectives. 1991. U.S. Department

of Health and Human Services. Public Health Service. (PHS) 91-50212.

3

Healthy People 2000, p. 112.

4

See Appendix D, Child Nutrition Act: P.L. 103-448, Sec. 19(a).

5

Healthy People 2000, p. 251.

1

The education community is also supportive of nutrition education

goals. A guide for the education community, the National Education

Goals in the Goals 2000: Educate America Act states that, by the

year 2000, all students will have access to physical education and

health education to ensure they are healthy and fit.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) actively supports these

Year 2000 Goals through its School Meals Initiative for Healthy

Children,6 which promotes proper nutrition and nutrition education

for children based on the Dietary Guidelines for Americans and the

Food Guide Pyramid. This initiative requires schools to serve meals

that meet Federal Dietary Guidelines and to teach children about

nutrition so they will choose foods that are good for them. The USDA

established Team Nutrition to help schools implement the new

requirements in the School Meals Initiative. The mission of Team

Nutrition is to improve the health and education of young people by

creating innovative public and private partnerships that promote food

choices for a healthful diet through media, schools, families, and the

community. Team Nutrition is working toward its goals through two

initiatives which include training and technical assistance to school

food service personnel and adequate nutrition education for children.7

In-school efforts emphasize the importance of nutrition education to

the success of nutrition policy changes in school meals.

It is not enough to change the food on the plate. We must also

provide the knowledge and the skills that enable children to

make choices that lead to a nutritious diet and improved

health. It also is vital that local meal providers receive

training on how to improve meal quality. This dual initiative

to educate children and assist meal providers offers many

opportunities to influence both what foods are offered by

schools and what foods are eaten by children.8

These efforts are supplemented with materials developed and

distributed through partner networks and directly by USDA s Food

and Consumer Service and its Cooperative State Research, Education,

and Extension Service, as well as other government agencies such as

the Department of Education and the Department of Health and

Human Services.

6

Part of the implementation of the National School Lunch Program. 7CFR Parts 210 and 220.

7

Team Nutrition. 1995. U.S. Department of Agriculture.

8

Federal Register, June 13, 1995.

2

This report presents the findings from the survey Nutrition Education

in Public Schools, K-12 that was requested by the Food and

Consumer Service of the USDA. It was designed to provide data on

the status of nutrition education in U.S. public schools in order to help

track current and future initiatives. The survey was conducted during

the spring of 1995 through the Fast Response Survey System (FRSS)

of the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) by Westat,

Inc., a research firm in Rockville, Maryland.

The questionnaires were sent to 1,000 school principals of a nationally

representative sample of U.S. public elementary, middle, and high

schools (see Appendix A for survey methodology). The principals

were asked to assign the completion of the survey to the person most

knowledgeable about nutrition education at the school. Respondents

were encouraged to consult with others if they were unsure of the

answer to a question. The survey requested information about the

following issues:

The placement of nutrition education in the curriculum,

The content of nutrition instruction,

The coordination of nutrition education, and

Resources for nutrition education.

Survey findings are presented for all schools and frequently by the

following school characteristics:

School instructional level: elementary school; middle school;

and high school.

School enrollment size: small (less than 300); moderate (300-

499); and large (500 or more).

Metropolitan status of school: city; urban fringe; town; and

rural.

Geographic region: Northeast; Southeast; Central; and West.

Data have been weighted to national estimates of public schools. All

comparative statements made in this report have been tested for

statistical significance though chi-square tests or t-tests adjusted for

multiple comparisons using the Bonferroni adjustment and are

3

significant at the .05 level or better. However, not all statistically

significant comparisons have been presented.

Nutrition Practically all public schools (99 percent) offer nutrition education

somewhere within the curriculum and many integrate it within the

Education in total curriculum (70 percent ) (table 1). The most common placement

the School is within the health curriculum (84 percent), but many schools also

teach nutrition through science classes (72 percent), or through a

Curriculum school health program (68 percent). While this does not provide

information about the intensity or quality of the nutrition messages

students are receiving, it shows that the messages are being conveyed

in a variety of ways within the schools.

Table 1. Percent of public schools offering nutrition education

within the school curriculum, by school characteristics:

1995

Some-

Integrated Home

where Health Science School

School characteristic within the econom-

within curric- curric- health

total ics curric-

curric- ulum ulum program

curricu- ulum

ulum

lum

All public schools... **-**-**-**-**-**

Instructional level

Elementary school 100-**-**-**-** 16

Middle school **-**-**-**-**-**

High school **-**-**-**-**-**

Size of enrollment

Small **-**-**-**-**-**

Moderate **-**-**-**-**-**

Large **-**-**-**-**-**

Metropolitan status

City **-**-**-**-**-**

Urban fringe **-**-**-**-**-**

Town **-**-**-**-**-**

Rural 100-**-**-**-** 53

Geographic region

Northeast 100-**-**-**-** 40

Southeast 100-**-**-**-** 38

Central 100-**-**-**-** 45

West **-**-**-**-**-**

NOTE: Respondents could report nutrition education in more than one place.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

4

Given their classroom organization, elementary schools (80 percent)

tend more than schools at other instructional levels to offer nutrition

education integrated within the total school curriculum, although half

or more of middle and high schools also reported this. High schools

are most likely to place nutrition education within the health

curriculum (93 percent) and the home economics curriculum (92

percent). The health curriculum is also the most common placement

for nutrition education in middle schools (85 percent). Fifty-three

percent of rural schools offer nutrition education through the home

economics curriculum, compared with 29 percent of city schools.

Nutrition is taught in each and every grade from kindergarten through

tenth grade in over 90 percent of all public schools; it is taught in

eleventh and twelfth grades in over 80 percent of schools (figure 1 and

table 2). These statistics do not reflect the proportion of students

participating at each grade level, but give a broad overview of

nutrition education offerings. The percent of schools with nutrition

education requirements is substantially lower at each grade level than

the percent of schools that teach nutrition. For each grade from

kindergarten through eighth, at least 50 percent of all schools have

district or state requirements for students to receive nutrition

education; 40 percent have these requirements for ninth and tenth

grades; about 20 percent for eleventh and twelfth grades (figure 1 and

table 3).

Figure 1. Percent of public schools where nutrition is taught and

where nutrition education is required, by grade: 1995

Percent

100

Taught

80

60

40

20 Required

0

K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Grade

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

5

Table 2. Percent of public schools where nutrition is taught, by

grade and geographic region: 1995

All public

Grade Northeast Southeast Central West

schools

Kindergarten 92 90 93 92 91

1st grade 94 89 94 95 96

2nd grade 96 92 97 97 96

3rd grade 94 92 97 93 95

4th grade 96-93-100-**-**

5th grade 93 90 98 91 94

6th grade 93 94 97 91 92

7th grade 95 92 99 96 91

8th grade 91 89 95 94 88

9th grade 91 84 91 93 93

10th grade 92 88 95 89 95

11th grade 84 86 90 81 82

12th grade 84 83 89 82 82

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

Table 3. Percent of public schools where nutrition education is

required, by grade and geographic region: 1995

All public

Grade Northeast Southeast Central West

schools

Kindergarten 58 58 65 58 53

1st grade 61 62 66 61 55

2nd grade 62 62 70 64 55

3rd grade 60 60 68 61 54

4th grade 62 60 75 68 51

5th grade 60 59 72 59 54

6th grade 58 58 66 56 54

7th grade 58 62 64 57 51

8th grade 50 51 58 48 46

9th grade 40 37 49 37 39

10th grade 40 39 39 36 45

11th grade 23 36 21 21 20

12th grade 20 28 21 20 16

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

Among all schools, 99 percent teach nutrition in at least one of their

grades, and 64 percent require nutrition education in at least one of

their grades (figure 2). Substantially more elementary schools than

high schools require nutrition education in at least one of their grades

(68 versus 54 percent).

6

Figure 2. Percent of public schools where nutrition is taught and

where nutrition education is required in at least one

grade, by instructional level: 1995

Nutrition taught

Nutrition education

required

Percent

99 99 98 97

10

80

68

64

6

1

60 54

40

20

0

All public Elementary Middle High

schools school school school

Instructional level

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

Nutrition Nutrition education in the classroom is intended to accomplish three

important objectives.9 The first is to convey needed information, or

Education the facts about nutrition, so students are knowledgeable about healthy

Topics eating practices. The second is to change unhealthy attitudes so

students have the motivation to establish healthy eating practices. The

third is to teach positive skills so students have all the tools to

accomplish their nutritional goals. The challenge is to further these

objectives in ways that are age-appropriate and that respect personal

and cultural preferences. The survey included a list of 17 nutrition

topics that were divided into the following 3 categories: knowledge,

motivation and attitudes, and behavior.10 Respondents reported which

of the topics are covered in any grade in the school, the extent of

coverage (for those topics covered), and which topics represent a main

focus of nutrition education at the school.

Schools reported covering a wide range of topics. Each of the 17

topics are covered in the nutrition curricula of at least 60 percent of

schools (table 4). Topics covered by more than 90 percent of schools,

and covered thoroughly by the greatest percent, are the following:

9

Collins, Janet L., Leavy Small, M., Kann, L., Collins Pateman, B., Gold, R., and Kolbe, L., School Health

Education. Journal of School Health, 65(8) (October 1995):302.

10

See Appendix C, Survey Form, Question 2.

7

The relationship between diet and health,

Finding and choosing healthy foods,

Nutrients and their food sources,

The Food Guide Pyramid, and

Dietary guidelines and goals.

Table 4. Percent of public schools that cover various topics in

nutrition education, the percent that cover them

thoroughly, and the percent for whom the topic

represents a main focus of nutrition education at their

school: 1995

Represents

Covered

Topic Covered a main

thoroughly

focus*

Relationship between diet and

health 97 45 47

Finding and choosing healthy

foods 97 40 34

Nutrients and their food sources 96 43 42

Food Guide Pyramid 94 53 47

Dietary guidelines and goals 92 38 35

Reading food labels 90 32 8

Influences on food choices, such as

habits, advertising, beliefs, and

cultural preferences 87 21 15

Changing eating habits

(e.g., willingness to try new

foods 85 20 9

Link between diet and diseases

such as hypertension, heart

disease, and cancer 83 29 13

Interpreting nutritional information

from food labels 83 31 9

Healthy weight control 82 23 5

Preparing healthy food 78 32 8

Developing a personal nutrition

plan 74 22 4

Body image 72 18 4

Signs and symptoms of eating

disorders and health risks of

diets, pills, binging, and purging .. 71 28 8

Keeping a food diary 61 22 1

Association between eating and

stress 60 17 4

*Schools were asked to report up to three.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

8

Many topics are covered at all instructional levels. However, high

schools are more likely to cover such age-appropriate topics as

healthy weight control, body image, eating disorders, and the

association between eating and stress; middle schools are next most

likely; and elementary schools are least likely to cover these topics

(table 5).

Table 5. Percent of public schools that cover various topics in

nutrition education, by instructional level: 1995

All public Elementary Middle High

Topic

schools school school school

Relationship between diet and

health 97 96 97 99

Finding and choosing healthy

foods 97 96 96 99

Nutrients and their food

sources 96 95 96 99

Food Guide Pyramid 94 93 94 96

Dietary guidelines and goals 92 90 93 97

Reading food labels 90 86 94 98

Influences on food choices,

such as habits, advertising,

beliefs, and cultural

preferences 87 83 90 96

Changing eating habits

(e.g., willingness to try new

foods 85 82 84 96

Link between diet and diseases

such as hypertension, heart

disease, and cancer 83 76 93 96

Interpreting nutritional

information from food labels 83 77 91 97

Healthy weight control 82 74 91 98

Preparing healthy food 78 69 89 95

Developing a personal nutrition

plan 74 66 81 90

Body image 72 62 82 93

Signs and symptoms of eating

disorders and health risks of

diets, pills, binging, and

purging 71 57 89 98

Keeping a food diary 61 51 71 82

Association between eating and

stress 60 46 75 92

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

9

Schools were asked to select the three topics that represent a main

focus of nutrition education at their schools. The Food Guide

Pyramid and the relationship between diet and health were each

selected by 47 percent of all schools surveyed. Nutrients and their

food sources were selected by 42 percent of schools, and 35 percent

selected dietary guidelines and goals as part of the school s main focus

(table 4).

Coordination Research has shown that schools or districts where the nutrition

education efforts are coordinated by a person or group have an

of Nutrition opportunity to present a more focused message to students about the

Education importance of healthy eating. Coordination can integrate the

curriculum across grades so the nutrition lessons at each grade level

build on the previous year s lessons, can integrate the nutrition

messages across subjects within a grade, and can integrate classroom

nutrition lessons with related nonclassroom activities. In addition,

coordinators can act as repositories and resources for materials

received by the school or district.

Schools reported the manner in which their nutrition education efforts

are coordinated by a person or group. The majority of public schools

(61 percent) have no nutrition education coordination, meaning each

teacher is responsible for his or her nutrition lessons (table 6). About

9 percent of the schools have one person within the school

coordinating nutrition education; 24 percent coordinate using a group

or committee; and about 6 percent have someone outside the school,

for example from the district, coordinate nutrition education.

Coordination from outside the school is more likely for elementary

schools (8 percent) compared with middle schools (3 percent), and for

city schools (13 percent) compared with town (3 percent) or rural

schools (3 percent). A school s type of nutrition education

coordination does not affect the curriculum placement of nutrition

education within the school (table 7).11

11

Because of the smaller sample sizes for each type of coordination, the standard errors for these percents were

large (see Table 7a in Appendix B). Therefore, the differences shown in table 7 are not statistically significant.

10

Table 6. Percent of public schools with various types of nutrition

education coordination, by school characteristics: 1995

Several

One person Someone No

teachers, a

School characteristic for the whole outside the coordination

group or

school school* effort

committee

All public schools 9 24 6 61

Instructional level

Elementary school 7 19 8 66

Middle school 14 40 3 44

High school 12 25 4 59

Size of enrollment

Small 10 19 6 66

Moderate 10 21 6 62

Large 9 28 6 57

Metropolitan status

City 8 20 13 59

Urban fringe 9 24 7 60

Town 13 28 3 56

Rural 8 23 3 67

Geographic region

Northeast 13 21 7 59

Southeast 6 25 9 60

Central 11 28 5 56

West 8 19 6 67

*For example, from the district.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

11

Table 7. Percent of public schools offering nutrition education

within the school curriculum, by person or group

responsible for coordinating nutrition education: 1995

Several

One person Someone No

teachers, a

Placement of nutrition for the whole outside the coordination

group or

education school school* effort

committee

Integrated within the

total curriculum 60 68 83 70

Health curriculum 79 88 90 82

Science curriculum 65 72 70 74

School health program... 68 81 74 62

Home economics

curriculum 47 52 17 39

*For example, from the district.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

The educational background and training of the people responsible for

coordination of nutrition education varies among the small number of

schools that have a single coordinator on staff (figure 3). Seventy-two

percent have a coordinator with a bachelor s degree or higher in

nutrition or a nutrition-related area. About 61 percent have a

coordinator, regardless of education level, who has completed some

inservice or other training in nutrition or a nutrition-related area (not

shown in a table).

Figure 3. Percent of coordinators with various highest levels of

training in nutrition or a nutrition-related area: 1995

2% Highest training

Graduate degree

Bachelor's degree

20%

Associate's degree

34%

College coursework

Inservice training

5%

None

1%

38%

NOTE: Based on the estimated number of public schools with a single nutrition education

coordinator: 7,290 (9 percent).

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

12

Resources for Nutrition education resources available to schools include not only

curriculum and other lesson materials but also the school meals

Nutrition program, guest speakers, and assemblies and other events. All of

Education these can be coordinated to enhance positive nutrition messages. The

FRSS survey asked schools about receiving these resources and the

extent to which resources received are used at their schools.

Materials Used to Various types of materials are commonly used by schools to teach

nutrition in the classroom. Most schools use materials developed by

Teach Nutrition

teachers in their schools (90 percent), health or science textbooks (89

percent), and materials developed for a specific grade level (83

percent) (table 8). High schools are more likely than schools at other

instructional levels to use state-recommended (79 percent) or state-

mandated (58 percent) materials for nutrition instruction, and

elementary schools (44 percent) are more likely than middle schools

(33 percent) to use materials developed by a district-level curriculum

coordinator (table 8).

Table 8. Percent of public schools that use various types of

materials to teach nutrition education, by instructional

level: 1995

All public Elementary Middle

Type of material used High school

schools school school

From external sources 92 93 90 94

Developed by teachers in the

school 90 90 87 93

Health or science textbooks ... 89 87 90 93

Developed for a specific

grade level 83 87 81 74

State-recommended 65 61 64 79

State-mandated 44 40 43 58

Developed by district-level

curriculum coordinator 40 44 33 35

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

Many schools use packaged materials and lesson plans for nutrition

Sources of

instruction. Given a list of 10 outside sources, schools were asked to

Materials

identify those from which they received nutrition education resources

for teaching, and the extent to which the resources were used at their

school. Ninety-seven percent of schools report receiving nutrition

lesson materials from at least one source outside of the school, most

often from professional or trade

13

associations (87 percent) and the food industry or commodities

groups, such as the Dairy Council or the Potato Board (86 percent)

(table 9).

Table 9. Percent of public schools that receive and use materials

for nutrition education from various sources: 1995

Materials All or most

Source

received materials used*

All sources 97 -

Professional or trade association 87 32

Food industry or commodities

group 86 37

School library 71 33

Cooperative Extension Service 65 22

USDA Food and Nutrition

Information Center 64 32

State education agency 58 31

State Nutrition Education Training

(NET) Program 42 29

American School Food Service

Association 40 26

Colleges or universities 35 18

National Food Service Management

Institute 26 24

*Of schools that received the materials.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

The two Federal government sources, the Cooperative Extension

Service (also known as the USDA Extension Service) and the USDA

Food and Nutrition Information Center, were identified by over 60

percent of schools as sources for lesson materials and other resources.

The Cooperative Extension Service has as its mission to diffuse

practical information about agriculture, home economics, and rural

energy. Rural schools (78 percent) and small schools (75 percent) are

most likely to receive materials from this source (table 10). Because

of the sample size for this survey, the effects of school size cannot be

distinguished from the effects of metropolitan status through a

multivariate analysis, but among all public schools in the U.S., small

schools tend to be rural and rural schools tend to be small.

14

Table 10. Percent of public schools that receive and use

materials for nutrition education from the Cooperative

Extension Service, by school characteristics: 1995

Materials All or most

School characteristic

received materials used*

All public schools 65 22

Size of enrollment

Small 75 24

Moderate 67 18

Large 57 23

Metropolitan status

City 57 24

Urban fringe 45 19

Town 72 25

Rural 78 20

*Of schools that received the materials.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Fast Response

Survey System, Nutrition Education in U.S. Public Schools, K-12, FRSS 52, 1995.

Of the materials from sources outside the school, schools reported the

highest classroom usage for those received from the food industry or

commodities groups, professional or trade associations, the USDA

Food and Nutrition Information Service, and state education agencies

(table 9).

Healthy People 2000 states that optimally, school nutrition

School Meals

education should include educational cafeteria experiences as well as

Program classroom work. 12 It appears that most schools are taking some steps

toward achieving this goal. Ninety-one percent of all schools offer

nutrition education for students in some way through the school meals

program: 93 percent of elementary, 88 percent of middle, and 86

percent of high schools (table 11). More than half of elementary

schools reported displaying nutrition information on the cafeteria

bulletin board and sponsoring a school lunch week where parents

eat with students and participate in other activities. Meals programs in

elementary schools are more likely than those at other instructional

levels to provide kitchen tours.

12

Healthy People 2000, p. 127.

15

Table 11. Percent of public schools where the school meals

program provides nutrition education or coordinates

with classroom efforts, by instructional level: 1995

All public Elementary Middle High

Meals program effort

schools school school school

Any effort 91 93 88 86

Bulletin board with nutrition

displays 65 68 63 57

School lunch week 51 57 45 37

Nutrient information 48 49 46 47

Serves meals to correspond

with classroom activities 46 49 44 37

Tours 35 39 27 28

Nutrition input to newsletter ... 32 36 29 20

Education in classroom 22 25 16 18

Tasting parties 21 24 19 15

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, Na



Contact this candidate