Abstract

The purpose was to create and assess the impact of food literacy curriculum alongside a centrally procured school snack program among grade five students in Southwestern Ontario, Canada. Grade five students (N = 287) from five intervention and three controls schools participated in an 8-week food delivery program. In addition to the food delivery program, intervention schools received a resource kit and access to 42 multidisciplinary food literacy lesson plans using the produce delivered as part of the food delivery program. Participants completed matched pre- and post-test online surveys to assess fruit and vegetable intake, knowledge, preferences, and attitudes. Descriptive analyses and changes in scores between the intervention and control schools were assessed using one-way ANOVAs, paired samples t-tests, and McNemar’s tests. In total, there were 220 participants that completed both the pre- and post-test surveys. There was a significant improvement in fruit and vegetable intake (p = 0.038), yet no differences in knowledge of the recommended number of food group servings, knowledge of food groups, or fruit and vegetable preferences or attitudes were observed. Integrating nutrition lesson plans within core curricula classes (e.g., math, science, and literacy) can lead to modest increases in fruit and vegetable intake.

Highlights

  • Despite Canadian children consuming adequate carbohydrates, protein, and fat as recommended [1], fruit and vegetable (FV) intake among school-aged children and adolescents is concerning

  • The data suggest that there was a significant impact of the food literacy curriculum for FV intake, while no effects were observed for knowledge of the recommended number of food group servings, knowledge of food groups, FV preferences, or attitudes

  • The present findings suggest that the food literacy lesson plans did not improve knowledge of Canada’s Food Guide recommended number of FV servings, knowledge of food groups, FV preferences, or attitudes

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Summary

Introduction

Despite Canadian children consuming adequate carbohydrates, protein, and fat as recommended [1], fruit and vegetable (FV) intake among school-aged children and adolescents is concerning. Data from the Canadian Community Health Survey in 2017 [2] suggested that only. 30.7% of males and females aged 12–17 years consumed five or more servings of FV per day. Among a large Canadian study of students in grades 6-12 from nine provinces (N = 47,203), only 9.9%. Often used as a proxy for healthy eating, FV consumption has been associated with various health outcomes in both the short- and long-term [5,6,7]. Increasing FV consumption has been a central feature of public health initiatives to promote healthy eating over the last few decades

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