Promoting food literacy in primary school classrooms through the HealthLit4Kids Program in Australia

Author:

Kelly Rebecca K12ORCID,Peralta Louisa3ORCID,Nash Rosie1

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, College of Health and Medicine, University of Tasmania , Hobart , Australia

2. Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford , Oxford , UK

3. School of Education and Social Work, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Sydney , Sydney , Australia

Abstract

Lay Summary Food literacy (FL) refers to the knowledge, skills, and behaviours associated with healthy eating. Schools are recognised as an important setting for FL promotion during childhood. HealthLit4Kids is an Australian primary school intervention that engages students, families, and educators to promote health literacy. This study aimed to assess the promotion of FL, a subtype of health literacy, in primary school classrooms across five schools. Teachers planned and implemented classroom activities over a 12-month period. Researchers examined lesson plans created by teachers and ‘artefacts’ (e.g. drawings, models) created by students during activities. Most classroom activities considered the nutritional knowledge and interpersonal communication skills associated with healthy eating, whereas fewer activities addressed students’ ability to critically analyse and apply information relating to food. The FL themes considered most frequently in classroom activities were ‘food and health choices’, ‘knowledge’, and ‘skills and behaviour’. Whereas the FL themes considered less frequently were ‘food systems’, ‘emotion’, and ‘culture’. The delivery of classroom activities was supported by the integration of other curriculum areas (e.g. The Arts and English). Future studies are required to understand how school-based interventions can promote the areas of FL that were less frequently addressed in this intervention in the classroom and beyond.

Funder

Clarendon Fund Medical Sciences Scholarship

MIGA

Tasmanian Community Fund

UTAS College of Arts

Law and Education Hothouse Funding

UTAS Creativity

Culture & Society Research Development

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health (social science)

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