Fruits and vegetables provide important nutrients that help children grow and thrive, but few kids and teens eat enough of them. They might not have access to a variety of produce at home, or they think of fruits and vegetables as things they should eat rather than ones they want to eat.
Farm-to-school is one way to get students excited about healthy eating. The term "farm-to-school" encompasses a variety of preK-12 programs that bring local produce into schools and teach students about nutrition through fun, experiential learning.
Farm-to-school programs can include:
Farm-to-school can work in any climate. Schools in colder regions might emphasize local produce more in the spring and fall, incorporate frozen or canned local produce into winter meals, or feature low- or nonfat milk from local dairies between produce seasons.
Schools also have flexibility in determining what counts as "local." Schools can define "local" in terms of miles, counties, states, regions, or types of produce. Your school's definition will depend on how close it is to farming areas and the variety of farm products available in the region.
As students learn where their food comes from and get exposed to a variety of fresh produce, they discover that healthy food can be tasty and satisfying. Studies show that, over time, students in schools with farm-to-school programs tend to:
Farm-to-school programs also benefit schools. They help schools that participate in federal meal programs meet federal nutrition standards, which require that school breakfasts offer at least 1 serving of fruit and that lunches offer at least 1 serving each of fruit and vegetables. Schools with farm-to-school programs have higher participation in school meals, which means more food-service revenue. And school staff often adopt healthier eating habits when local foods are offered at schools.
To get your farm-to-school program started, contact other schools in your district or nearby districts that have successful programs to learn how they run theirs.
You also can reach out to local farmers to check their interest and find out what foods they can offer. Farmers' markets, community-supported agriculture coalitions, farmer cooperatives, and farmer bureaus can be good places to start.
Discuss farm-to-school with administrators, food-service managers, and teachers. Once you have the interest of school staff, you can start promoting the idea to students, parents, and community groups to get their input. If possible, organize a meeting to bring interested parties together and brainstorm goals and ideas.
Possible goals include:
Funding your farm-to-school program may simply be a matter of reallocating some of the existing food-service budget for local foods, asking distributors to provide local food whenever possible, and stating a preference for local produce when seeking competitive bids and price quotes.
If you need additional funds to plan or implement your farm-to-school program, grants are available from government agencies, nonprofit organizations, private foundations, and businesses. Some schools use special fundraisers, like community meals, cookbooks, or walk-a-thons.
Starting small allows staff who are implementing the program to learn as they go, and it gives schools the flexibility to revise the program as new opportunities and insights arise.
Here are some ideas to get you started:
If no schools in your district have a farm-to-school program yet, it may work best to launch a pilot program in one or two schools, and then expand it to others once it's operating smoothly.
Whatever type of farm-to-school project you decide to take on, get students excited about it. Talk about the program in class and promote local foods with special signs in the cafeteria, announcements via social media, taste-testing events, cooking lessons, and notices in school menus.
Reviewed by: KidsHealth Medical Experts