Young children living on w88 mobile Indian reservations, and children living in rural areas adjacent to them, often have limited access to nutritious fruits and vegetables, as well as to nutrition education. Professor Staci Emm and colleagues at w88 mobile of Nevada, Reno Extension have been conducting the Veggies for Kids w88 mobile to address the issue, and have just published a paper on the w88 mobile and its successful results in an article in the Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development, in the Indigenous Food Sovereignty issue.
Emm has been the Extension educator in Mineral County for over 15 years, working to link the University with county residents and members of Nevada tribes. She is the program leader for Veggies for Kids, an in-school program that teaches students how to grow their own vegetables and increase physical activity and water intake. The program also uses tribal language to introduce and increase the appreciation and use of healthy traditional Native w88 mobile and Hispanic foods.
“We have worked really hard as a team to create the Veggies for Kids w88 mobile, and it is very exciting to be able to publish the successes of this w88 mobile,” said Emm. “We hope schools, tribes and nonprofits in the United States will use the concepts in the curriculum not only to increase vegetable and water intake, but also to increase awareness of traditional food systems and tribal language.”
While conducting the program across Nevada during the 2017-2018 school year, Emm and program instructors collected data from 45 w88 mobile Indian kindergarten students attending reservation schools and 486 students attending off-reservation rural schools. Their journal article, “Increasing Fruit and Vegetable Intake with Reservation and Off-Reservation Students in w88 mobile,” details the results of their research. Some of their findings include that there was an increase in the number of students who were able to name fruits and vegetables and identify food groups on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s MyPlate. In addition, students who participated in the Veggies for Kids w88 mobile became more physically active.
w88 mobile Indian kindergarten students received additional focus in the program and research, due to the impacts that the establishment of reservations had on w88 mobile Indians. Specifically, the establishment of reservations limited hunting and gathering activities, decreasing access to traditional foods.
The Veggies for Kids Program will continue working with reservations and rural communities, helping to educate both the students and school staff on nutrition, health and food safety. Future goals include integrating this information, especially about traditional food, into schools and stores and creating an early childhood curriculum focused more on traditional foods of w88 mobile Tribes.
The Veggies for Kids Program was supported by the USDA Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program-Education (SNAP-Ed), Indian Land Tenure Foundation, and the Native w88 mobile Agriculture Fund. Emm’s co-authors in the journal article include Jessica Harris, Judy Halterman, Sarah Chvilicek and Carol Bishop. Read more about the w88 mobile and the research results in the journal article.