Health project
targets Delta school children
By
Linda Breazeale
MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Obesity is no small problem for Mississippians, and
a program under way in the Delta addressing it by promoting
healthy lifestyles among the state's youngest residents:
school children.
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Top
-- These Little Organ Annie dolls help
teach children that people look alike on
the inside. Each doll opens to reveal The
OrganWise Guys, 10 characters that help
teach the basics of human physiology and
how the body responds to different foods
and lifestyles. Representatives of
Mississippi State University's Extension
Service said these dolls are ideal for
communicating health issues, inciting
behavior change and enlivening the
education process for any age
group.
Bottom
-- The OrganWise Guys help teach children
the basics of human physiology and how the
body responds to different foods and
lifestyles. They feature characters (front
row, from left) Peri Stolic, the
intestines; Hardy Heart; the Kidney
Brothers; Madame Muscle; Windy, the lungs;
(back row, from left) Luigi Liver, Peter
Pancreas and Calci M. Bone. Together with
two additional characters -- Sir Rebrum,
the brain and Pepto, the stomach -- they
teach children four rules for healthy
living: low fat, high fiber, lots of water
and exercise.
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Mississippi
State University's Extension Service is partnering with its
sister organizations in Louisiana and Arkansas for the
program known as Delta HOPE, which stands for Healthy
Options for People through Extension. The program is funded
by a W.K. Kellogg Foundation grant and involves educational
efforts and evaluation in the Delta region by Extension
agents from the three states.
"Obesity
is easier to prevent than to treat," said Deborah Little,
program coordinator for Mississippi. "If we are going to
make a difference, we need to reach the children before they
develop unhealthy habits."
Little
is the curriculum and evaluation manager for the Extension
Family and Nutrition Program at MSU. She said the program is
an organized effort to help teachers incorporate nutrition
and exercise curriculum in the classroom.
"Teachers
don't want or need another thing to do in their classrooms,
but this curriculum encourages them to incorporate exercise
into their regular lessons," Little said. "For example,
children may do jumping jacks or march in place while they
work on their spelling or math lessons."
The
program combines existing curricula called Take 10! and The
OrganWise Guys to focus on physical activity and nutrition.
By incorporating 10 minutes of exercise three times a week,
children receive an extra 30 minutes of exercise they
normally would not have received. Additionally, Little said
research shows an active curriculum helps students stay on
task.
After
26 years of teaching, Gwen Pettis knows what works for
kindergarten children, and what does not.
"The
activities actually help kids focus. The curriculum
reinforces learning skills. We use chants as we move to help
us count, recite information and practice beginning sounds,"
Pettis said. "The children get excited when it's time for
Take 10! It's a great way to remind ourselves to exercise.
Still, some children get tired after just 10
minutes."
Pettis
appreciates anything that encourages physical activity at
Batesville Elementary School.
"Currently,
we do not have a physical education teacher, and recess is
mostly free play," Pettis said. "Students need physical
activities in a structured setting."
Pettis
receives help from a cast of characters known as The
OrganWise Guys. Originally created apart from the Take 10!
health curriculum, The OrganWise Guys help teach the basics
of human physiology and how the body responds to different
foods and lifestyles. They feature 10 characters such as
Hardy Heart; Windy, the lungs; and the Kidney
Brothers.
Dr.
Michelle Lombardo of Duluth, Ga., created the characters and
said The OrganWise Guys are ideal for communicating health
issues, inciting behavior change and enlivening the
education process for any age group. The health material
with the OrganWise program targets every age group: ages 3
to 8, first through fifth grades, and adolescents through
senior adults.
Lombardo
said this concept for teaching children was born out of
adult health sessions she led as a health professional in
the early 1990s. When adults learned that their health
problems were 20 to 30 years in the making, they requested
ways to help children make better choices to prevent future
trouble.
"We
want to help kids take responsibility for their choices and
learn why certain choices are good or bad for their health,"
Lombardo said. "Every child learns the four rules of The
OrganWise Guys: low fat, high fiber, lots of water and
exercise.
"The
Extension agents are essential in promoting this curriculum
and making sure that the material is used," she said. "After
one teacher in a school begins using the program, it's
usually contagious because of how user-friendly the material
is and how well it complements the existing
objectives."
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Released:
March 24, 2005
Contact: Dr. Deborah Little, (662) 325-0623
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