By
Keryn Page MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Children in 65 Mississippi Delta area elementary
schools will learn about nutrition through an innovative
curriculum funded by a grant aimed at preventing childhood
obesity. The
W.K. Kellogg Foundation is providing $1.57 million for the
five-year grant to support nutrition programs in
Mississippi, Louisiana and Arkansas. Childhood obesity is
one of four key issues being addressed by a tri-state
Extension Service "memorandum of understanding" signed May
15. "This
program mainly targets Mississippi school children in Delta
counties," said Deborah Little, Family Nutrition Program
accountability manager with Mississippi State University's
Extension Service. In addition to the Mississippi schools,
the grant provides funding for 10 schools in Louisiana and
10 in Arkansas. "The
OrganWise Guys Take 10! Project" curriculum features puppets
that represent different parts of the body. Students learn
what function the different body parts perform, how
nutrition relates to those different body parts and how it
impacts overall health. Integral
to the program's success is incorporating physical activity
into normal daily activities, which teaches children to make
exercise and good health a priority every day. "We
encourage teachers to have three 10-minute sessions each
day, which provides the students with an additional 30
minutes of physical activity," Little said. "The idea is to
get kids more active and to help teachers do it in a fun
way." For
example, third-graders may recite spelling words while
marching in place or performing jumping-jacks. Whatever the
activity, the important thing is that children get the
exercise they need to help combat the growing problem of
childhood obesity. "The
students love the Take 10! curriculum. If a teacher doesn't
remember that it's time for a 10-minute session, the
students will remind them," Little said. "And once the
teacher sees it can be an integral part of the classroom
curriculum, everyone will benefit." Three
daily 10-minute sessions is the goal of the Take 10!
curriculum. At a minimum, teachers are asked to have at
least three sessions per week. Michelle
Lombardo, president of Georgia-based Wellness Inc.,
developed the Take 10! curriculum in response to the high
rates of obesity and diagnosed diabetes throughout the
United States and particularly in the South. Family
Nutrition Program staff at MSU saw the value of the Take 10!
program in teaching Mississippi children the importance of
daily physical activity and good nutrition. A pilot
version of the Take 10! project involved students at four
Mississippi Delta schools -- Milestone, West Bolivar, South
Delta and James Rosser elementary schools. In addition to
the three 10-minute daily sessions of physical activity, the
curriculum uses the "OrganWise Guys" children's books, two
10-minute videos and an assembly program for all grades at
participating schools. The
program also emphasizes the importance of increasing daily
calcium intake and consuming five fruits and vegetables each
day. The
success of the pilot program will allow at least six other
Delta schools to take part in the curriculum this school
year. That number will significantly increase in the fall of
2004, with probably 30 or 40 schools
participating. Lombardo
trained MSU Food Nutrition Program assistants in using the
Take 10! curriculum during an August meeting on the
Starkville campus. Extension area agents and some county
directors will also be involved in training for the
program. The
grant was actually awarded to the Mississippi Food Network,
a collection of state bodies that address public health
issues. MSU's Family Nutrition Program is part of that
network, and it has taken the lead in getting the nutrition
program started. The FNP
will provide classroom teachers with the Take 10!
Curriculum. Wellness Inc. provides the "OrganWise Guys
Younger Years Series," which includes four soft-cover books
for children ages 4 to 8, teacher activities and character
figures. The OrganWise Guys figures include Hardy Heart,
Calci M. Bone and Windy the Lungs. Wellness
also provides each school's media center with hardback
copies of the OrganWise Guys books, a 30-minute motivational
health assembly for the students and two 10-minute
educational videos. The
Kellogg Foundation is funding the development and production
of the OrganWise Guys videos, one focusing on consuming five
fruits and vegetables daily and one focusing on bone
health. Released:
Sept. 8, 2003
Family,
Youth & Consumer News
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Battling
obesity...
Grant supports
nutrition lessons
in Delta schools
Contact: Dr. Deborah Little, (662) 325-0623
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:58
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