Findholt Nancy E, Izumi Betty T, Shannon Jackilen, Nguyen Thuan
School of Nursing/La Grande campus, Oregon Health and Science University, La Grande, Oregon, USA.
School of Community Health, Portland State University, Portland, Oregon, USA.
Rural Remote Health. 2016 Apr-Jun;16(2):3821. Epub 2016 Jun 11.
Childhood obesity disproportionately affects rural populations; therefore, promoting healthy eating among rural children is essential. Teachers are important role models for children and can influence children's eating behaviors through their own behaviors and beliefs about food. This study examined the food-related practices and beliefs of rural elementary and middle school teachers.
Data were used from the SNACZ study, a school- and community-based trial conducted in rural Oregon. Kindergarten through eighth-grade teachers (n=87), teaching students usually aged 5-14 years, from eight rural school districts completed a baseline survey in November 2012 concerning their classroom food practices, eating behaviors at school, beliefs about the school food environment, and nutrition knowledge. Frequencies of responses to each item were calculated.
Nearly all teachers (97.6%) agreed that a healthy school food environment is important, but fewer agreed that teachers' behaviors and the foods available at school influence students' eating behaviors (71.0% and 67.0%, respectively). Nearly 86% of teachers used candy as a reward for students, while 78.2% consumed unhealthy snacks and 42.5% consumed sweetened beverages in the classroom.
The results suggest that most rural teachers recognize that having a healthy school food environment is important, but are less aware of factors within the school that influence students' eating behaviors - including their own eating behaviors and classroom food practices - and, perhaps for this reason, many rural teachers engage in classroom practices and behaviors that do not promote healthy eating. Teacher training and expanded school policies that focus on teacher behavior may be needed to ensure a healthier rural school food environment.
儿童肥胖对农村人口的影响尤为严重;因此,在农村儿童中推广健康饮食至关重要。教师是儿童重要的行为榜样,能够通过自身关于食物的行为和信念影响儿童的饮食行为。本研究调查了农村中小学教师与食物相关的做法和信念。
数据来自SNACZ研究,这是一项在俄勒冈州农村地区开展的基于学校和社区的试验。来自八个农村学区的幼儿园至八年级教师(n = 87),所教学生通常年龄在5至14岁之间,于2012年11月完成了一项基线调查,内容涉及他们在课堂上的食物做法、在学校的饮食行为、对学校食物环境的信念以及营养知识。计算了每个项目的回答频率。
几乎所有教师(97.6%)都认为健康的学校食物环境很重要,但较少有人认同教师的行为和学校提供的食物会影响学生的饮食行为(分别为71.0%和67.0%)。近86%的教师用糖果作为学生的奖励,而78.2%的教师在课堂上食用不健康零食,42.5%的教师在课堂上饮用含糖饮料。
结果表明,大多数农村教师认识到拥有健康的学校食物环境很重要,但对学校内部影响学生饮食行为的因素(包括他们自己的饮食行为和课堂食物做法)认识不足,也许正因如此,许多农村教师在课堂上的做法和行为不利于促进健康饮食。可能需要开展教师培训并扩大关注教师行为的学校政策,以确保农村学校有更健康的食物环境。