Author: Bethony Morris
Planning Unit: Hancock County CES
Major Program: Nutrition and Food Systems General
Outcome: Long-Term Outcome
The Hancock County Cooperative Extension Expanded Food Nutrition Education Program Assistant (EFNEP) was asked to join the South Hancock Elementary 5th grade class. EFNEP decided to teach the Professor Popcorn program. When first meeting with the class EFNEP talked about how important eating fruits and vegetables where. All the ways they help our body to grow, keep us healthy, and make our body strong.
EFNEP learned that only 38% of students where eating vegetables at school lunch. They all agreed that they were offered veggies every day at lunch, but they didn’t eat them.
EFNEP and students started discussing the veggies they liked, and disliked. Why they felt like they didn’t like them, color, texture, smell. EFNEP, and students discussed how they could make the veggies they didn’t like taste better. Suggestions were such as…adding cheese, asking for ranch to drip them in, maybe if they had been cooked a different way. Hello Bites, were introduced to the students, and how they should taste all veggies, prepared in different ways before they said, no thank you, to them.
When the program came to an end, 50% more students where eating vegetables at school during lunch!
Bethony Morris Hancock/Daviess County ENFEPSuccess Story 2019/2020Hancock County Cooperative Extensi... Read More
Bethony Morris Hancock/Daviess EFNEPSuccess StoryEating More FruitsHancock County family resource an... Read More
According to the USDA Economic Research Service (ERS), 43% of all food spending in 2012 was on food ... Read More
The National Council for the Social Studies contends: “The primary purpose of Social Studies is to h... Read More