‘Embed food education in curriculum’ – experts

‘Embed food education in curriculum’ – experts

A new study by Deakin University has found that food education makes up just 2.6 per cent of the Victorian primary school curriculum.

The study, published in the journal Health Promotion International, sought the views of teachers, and health and education stakeholders about the opportunities and barriers for food education in Australian primary schools.

Lead author Dr Penny Love – a Senior Lecturer in Deakin’s Institute for Physical Activity and Nutrition (IPAN) – said one in four Australian children are overweight or obese, and schools are a key opportunity for obesity prevention.

“Good food education is critical in developing one’s food literacy and setting up healthy behaviours for life,” Dr Love said.

“But if you’re going to achieve good food literacy it needs to be content embedded across the curriculum rather than an ad-hoc additional program. It’s an important life skill.”

Dr Love said her study found food and nutrition content was often dealt with ad-hoc with add-ons like life education, kitchen garden, cooking and breakfast programs, typically delivered by an external provider at an additional cost to each school.

“If we’re serious about tackling rising rates of childhood obesity, food education should be integrated across all subjects,” she said.

“For example, students could calculate the energy density of foods in mathematics, study food cropping patterns in geography, explore food cultures in history, or debate the role of food marketing in English or media studies”.

Dr Love said this is possible because it’s already being done with sustainability and cultural diversity, which are both already integrated across the curriculum.

“If you can do it for climate change you could do it for food. Just like saving the planet, or celebrating people’s differences, looking after our nutrition is another key skill you need lifelong,” she said.

Key barriers

Dr Love said the greater value placed on academic achievement than health is a “key barrier” to the effective implementation of food and nutrition education.

The greatest barriers identified included limited leadership and coordination, a crowded curriculum, and poor availability of teaching resources with explicit links to the curriculum.

“There were teachers who expressed the sentiment of ‘who am I to tell people what to eat?’” she said.

“Teachers were hesitant to discuss food and nutrition issues with their class as they viewed it as a personal choice and were wary of appearing judgemental”.

The study found that the teachers were particularly concerned about parental resistance and some felt they didn’t personally model healthy behaviours themselves.

“It shows teachers need adequate support and training to deliver this content and role model healthy behaviours,” Dr Love said.

“Integrating food and nutrition into the curriculum ensures consistency of messages across the school, between what is taught in the classroom and what is experienced in the school environment – such as non-food rewards for achievement, and healthy canteen choices”.

Dr Love said some work was being done in the UK and US on the integration of food education into school teaching, and this showed that when content was embedded across the curriculum it had the most impact.

“We also heard in our interviews that there is a willingness from teachers, they feel promoting good health in their students is important. So, we need to work out how we can support teachers who are feeling overwhelmed, time-poor or under-equipped,” she said.

“At the moment we’re relying on classroom teachers really driving this area independently, and that only happens if they have a strong personal interest”.

Dr Love said that without the input of teachers and parents, children are growing up into adults without basic food knowledge and skills, like how to buy a healthy basket of food, how to incorporate a variety of fresh vegetables into tasty meals, or how much they should be eating.

“This lack of food literacy is a big contributor to our population’s growing reliance on convenience and ultra-processed food, and we know an excess consumption of these is a big driver of overweight and obesity,” she said.