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Practical and Effective: High Quality Resources for Nutrition Instruction, Assessment, and Impact Evaluation

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Practical and Effective: High Quality Resources for Nutrition Instruction, Assessment, and Impact Evaluation. The California Healthy Kids Resource Center. www.californiahealthykids.org. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Practical and Effective:

High Quality Resources for

Nutrition Instruction, Assessment, and Impact Evaluation

Page 2: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

The California Healthy Kids Resource Center

www.californiahealthykids.org

Page 3: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Practical and Effective: High Quality Resources for Nutrition

Instruction,Assessment, and Impact Evaluation Introducing the Panel

Moderator:

Deborah Wood, California Healthy Kids Resource Center

Panelists: • Jackie Russum, California Healthy

Kids Resource Center• Chris Boynton, Hayward Unified

School District• Robin Sinks, Long Beach Unified

School District• Dorothy Tule, Santa Clara Department

of Public Health

Page 4: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Nutrition Network LIAs - Assessment of PreK through Grade 12 Nutrition Instructional

Material Use, Development, and Needs

• Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute - Nancy Brown, Ph.D.

• Target sample - 81 2001-02 LIAs

• 62 returned (76.5%)

• Representing each of the 12 regions

Page 5: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Demographics

• Latino 47%

• Caucasian 16%

• Asian American 15%

• African American 10%

• Native American 25%

• Other 5%

• Low-Income 78%

• English L.L. 34%

• Special Needs 14%

• Immigrant 7%

• Migrant18%

• Pregnant Teens 5%

Page 6: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

PreK - 12th Grade Instruction

• Nutrition Learning Objectives - 21 - 27%

• Percent of students

PreK 59%

K - 3 76%

4 - 6 74%

6 - 8 62%

9 -12 53% • Teams Selected and

Developed Nutrition Education Materials

Classes Taught by

19 - 43% Classroom Teacher

14 - 16% Dietician

4 - 17% Health Teacher

5 - 12% School Food Service

2 - 13% P.E. Teacher

Page 7: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

PreK - 12th Grade Instruction

Material Selection and Use:

76% Used Criteria

78% Nutrition Network Guidelines

42% Nutrition Competencies

40% Health Framework

15% National Standards

• 68 different nutrition instructional materials

• Top three published materials used for instruction - 5 a Day Power Play, Healthy Choices, Healthy Me!, JumpStart Teens

• >50% used materials for other grade levels than designed

• 52% were satisfied with materials

Page 8: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Instructional Materials Developed by Network LIAs

• 25 Materials were developed and submitted by LIAs

• Reasons for development:

- Not topic specific

- Did not include appropriate teaching methods

- Not engaging

• 72% Developed by Teams

• 76% Used criteria for development

• 92% Satisfied

Page 9: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Materials and Resources NeededInstructional:

• 76% Parent and home linked lessons

• 74% Lessons integrating nutrition education with other subjects

• 74% Materials to assess student learning

Technical Assistance

and Training:

• 57% Integrating nutrition education with other subjects

• 43% Linking to standards

• 43% Creating cafeteria- linked lessons

Page 10: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Evaluation of Nutrition InstructionAssessment

77% Evaluate the effectiveness of nutrition

instruction

83% Knowledge

73% Behavior

67% Attitude

39% Skill

Page 11: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Participation in Standardized Health-Related Surveys

• 42% Participate in health-related surveys

• 30% Participate in the CHKS

• 17% FitnessGram

Page 12: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Recommendations

Advisory Committee• 9 Recommendations

• Training on integration of nutrition education and links to standards

• Training on assessing student skill acquisition

• Create processes to develop and modify materials to meet LIAs’ needs based on criteria

• Strategies to evaluate program impact

Page 13: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Integration of Nutrition Education with Other Subjects

Chris Boynton

Hayward Unified

School District

Page 14: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Assessment of Student Learning

Robin Sinks

Long Beach Unified

School District

Page 15: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Impact Evaluation

Dorothy Tule

Santa Clara

Public Health

Department

Page 16: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Questions?

Page 17: The California Healthy Kids  Resource Center

Thank you!

California Healthy Kids Resource Center

313 W. Winton Ave., Room 176

Hayward, CA 94544

510-670-4583

www.californiahealthykids.org