Accessing and consuming nutritious foodsPlan of Work

Back to Plans for the County

Bell County CES

Title:
Accessing and consuming nutritious foods
MAP:
Accessing nutritious foods
Agents Involved:
Rebecca Miller, Brandy Calvert, Stacy White
MAJOR PROGRAM 1:
Family and Consumer Sciences 4-H Core Curriculum
MAJOR PROGRAM 2:
Local Food Systems
MAJOR PROGRAM 3:
Food Preservation
MAJOR PROGRAM 4:
Accessing Nutritious Foods (general)
Situation:
Nutrition Education Programs help families and youth gain access to food and stretch food dollars; help communities to decrease hunger; and local food assistance programs to educate recipients on healthy and safe food preparation methods. Agents, paraprofessionals and volunteers are pivotal in influencing policies, systems, and environments and in training consumers and producers to maximize local access to food products from farm to table.

With societal changes and cuts in school budgets, many schools have eliminated family and consumer science labs and no longer include or have decreased FCS or Agriculture instruction in the curriculum. In nutrition alone, the lack of basic life skills is evidenced by alarming rises in childhood obesity, poor diets of youth of all ages, and an over-reliance on packaged/fast food.

Those who seek information often turn to internet sources which may not be based in research. Decision-making may be based on product marketing claims, family tradition, myths, faulty information, and lack of knowledge. Today’s massive health and economic problems are due in part to the lack of instruction in the home by parents and in school through Family and
Consumer Sciences classes.

4-H offers projects in FCS and Agriculture which assist youth in becoming responsible and contributing members of the family and contributing members of Kentucky communities. At the same time, these life skills prepare youth for the families they will establish as adults.
Long-Term Outcomes:
Youth, adults and families will increase average fruit and vegetable consumption by 1 or more servings per day.

Clientele will improve food management skills and healthy eating habits.
Intermediate Outcomes:
Clientele will plant, harvest and preserve produce.

Clientele will apply improved food preparation skills, food management skills, food safety and healthy eating habits.
Initial Outcomes:
Clientele will understand the importance of sustainable local agriculture to individual health and financial well-being.

Clientele will learn to grow, prepare and preserve food.

Clientele will increase knowledge and understanding of healthy eating, food safety and food resource management.
Evaluation:
Initial Outcome: Clientele will increase knowledge and understanding of healthy eating, food safety and food resource management.
Indicator: Clientele will be able to select healthy foods, understand food safety, discover healthy food sources.
Method: Written or oral evaluation
Timeline: 3-4 months

Intermediate Outcome: Clientele will plant, harvest and preserve produce. Clientele will apply improved food preparation skills, food management skills, food safety and healthy eating habits.
Indicator: Clientele will prepare or preserve food that they have grown and harvested themselves, using research-based Extension materials.
Method: Group discussion, follow-up phone calls
Timeline: 6-12 months

Long-term Outcome: Clientele will improve food management skills and healthy eating habits.
Indicator: A percentage of clientele will successfully access nutritious foods from local food systems and manage a healthier diet, increasing fruit and vegetable consumption.
Method: Farm and home visits, County Fair entries, follow-up phone calls
Timeline: 1-4 years
Learning Opportunities:

Audience: 4-H Youth

Project or Activity: 4-H Science Clubs

Content or Curriculum: UK publications

Inputs: Agent, volunteers

Date: 2017-2020


Audience: Low-income families, youth, adults, seniors

Project or Activity: SNAP-Ed

Content or Curriculum: SNAP-Ed curriculum, Healthy Choices for Every Body

Inputs: SNAP-Ed Assistants, Agents, Cabinet for Health and Families, libraries, non-profit organizations, Family Resource Centers

Date: 2017-2020


Audience: Adults, homemakers, families

Project or Activity: Plate it Up!

Content or Curriculum: Plate it Up! materials/recipes, Kentucky Proud materials

Inputs: Kentucky Proud materials, UK specialists, Agents

Date: 2017-2020


Audience: 4-H Youth, Cloverbuds

Project or Activity: Superstar Chef

Content or Curriculum: Superstar Chef 4-H Curriculum, UK publications and videos

Inputs: Agents, UK students, libraries, Family Resource Center directors

Date: 2017-2020


Audience: Adults, Master Gardeners, volunteers

Project or Activity: Community Organic Gardening

Content or Curriculum: UK Publications, UK Specialists, Master Gardeners curriculum

Inputs: Agent

Date: 2017-2020



Audience: Youth and families

Project or Activity: LEAP

Content or Curriculum: LEAP

Inputs: Schools, Family Resource Centers, SNAP-Ed Assistants

Date: 2017-2020



Audience: Youth

Project: 4-H Arts Club Make, Munch & Mingle

Curriculum: Visual Arts Tool Kit, SNAP-Ed material

Inputs: Agent, Public Library

Date: 2017-2020


Audience: Families & Homemakers

Project: Food Preservation 101

Curriculum: UK Food Preservation Publications, Ball Blue Book

Inputs: Agents, Specialists

Date: 2017-2020





Success Stories

Super Star Chef

Author: Rebecca Miller

Major Program: Family and Consumer Sciences 4-H Core Curriculum

     Growing concerns from the Bell County Extension Council about children not knowing how to prepare food or cook led to implementation of Super Star Chef, a program developed by the University of Kentucky Cooperative Extension and The School of Human and Environmental Science, Food and Nutrition.  This program teaches students how to make healthy recipes that they can take home and share with their families safely. Super Star Chef was presented by students from the Univers

Full Story
Back to Plans for the County