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Child caregivers will have knowledge and tools to provide an environment that promote healthy lifestyle habits for children in their care.
Increase caregiver understanding of: 1. Healthy FOOD and drink choices for children.
a. Supporting breastfed infants 2. The importance of encouraging children to eat fruits and vegetables. 3. The importance of decreasing children’s consumption of sweetened beverages. 4. Correct FOOD and drink portion sizes for children. 5. Children’s ability to read body cues of being hungry and full. 6. How the body needs FOOD for fuel versus FOOD to manage feelings. 7. How media influences children’s FOOD and drink choices. 8. Ways child caregivers can help children learn about healthy FOOD choices through child care
program/schedule planning. 9. Best practices relevant to helping children learn about and implement healthy FOOD choices while in child
care. 10. The importance of a child care program having a policy that encourages and supports children’s healthy eating
choices and habits. Increase caregiver ability to: 1. Teach and encourage children to eat fruits and vegetables. 2. Teach and encourage children to drink water and milk and decrease consumption of sweetened beverages. 3. Teach and encourage children to be aware of body cues related to feeling hungry and full. 4. Teach and encourage children to make healthy FOOD choices. 5. Teach and encourage children to be aware of marketer’s influence on their FOOD and drink choices. 6. Teach and encourage children to talk themselves into making healthy FOOD choices. 7. Educate parents on the importance of children being taught about and practicing healthy FOOD choices at
home. 8. Facilitate best practices to ensure children are encouraged and able to make healthy FOOD choices during
FOOD Pre Class Questionnaire X FOOD Post Class Questionnaire X FOOD Self-Assessment Tool X fit One Thing I Will Do…Card X Portion Control Quiz X Sugary Drink Quiz X Food Media Mania Quiz X Better Choices Game Board X Green Plate Food Cards
X
Yellow Plate Food Cards
X Red Plate Food Cards
X
Green Plate X Red Plate X Screen Time Game - TV
TV Food Pictures
X X
Spoonful of Sugar Parent Poster X More for Less is Not Always a Good Deal Poster X FOOD Activity Guide X Award Ribbons – I ate a NEW fruit today! X X Award Ribbons – I ate veggies today! X X I Want to be a Healthy Kid (FOOD) X X Healthy Food Hunt X X X I Ate Healthy Foods Chart X X X 2-3 Year old Food Guide X 4-8 Year old Food Guide X
o The problem: An overweight 3-year-old child is nearly 8 times as likely to become an overweight young adult compared to a non-overweight developing 3-year-old. Source: Zero to Three
• Childhood obesity is a national issue and a local issue – YOU can help.
• Impact: o Emotional Health
o Physical health
o Childhood obesity is associated with various health-related consequences. Heart disease, caused by:
* high cholesterol and/or * high blood pressure
Type 2 diabetes Asthma Sleep apnea
o Overweight and obese children and adolescents May experience immediate health consequences. May be at risk for weight-related health problems in adulthood.
• You can help fix the problem.
o In 2012, nearly 11 million children under age 5 in the United States were in some type of child care arrangement every week. Source: www.naccrra.org
o On average, the children of working mothers spend 35 hours a week in child care. Source: www.naccrra.org
• You o Touch children’s lives every day. o Are in a place of influence.
o In center and home-based childcare settings, teachers, and family child care providers influence children’s eating behaviors by the foods they offer, the behaviors they model, and their social interactions with children at snack and mealtimes. Source: NAEYC Young Children (March 2011) - The Impact of Teachers and Families on Young Children’s Eating Behaviors
• Where to start: o Provide information to children and parents regarding fit o Practice fitCare best practices in child care
What is fitCare?
• fitCare is a program to help child care providers combat the pediatric obesity epidemic. o It focuses on teaching children how to make healthy food and move choices.
• When caregivers implement the fitCare program, they use fit principles to:
o Teach children o Educate parents o Role model behavior o Implement best practices
• fitCare provides child caregivers with fit knowledge and tools to teach others about fit.
o Why being fit matters o What it is to be fit o How to be fit
• fit is a behavior theory. o Combines behavior change and choice theories o Brings a conscious awareness of why, what, and how we make healthy lifestyle choices
(food and physical activity choices)
o Acknowledges the importance of emotions and energy in the decision making process What to eat To move or not move
• fit connects four key factors to having a healthy body and weight o MOOD – Motivate Your MOOD o RECHARGE – RECHARGE Your Energy o FOOD – Think Your FOOD o MOVE – MOVE your Body
• What is fit? o fit recognizes that our MOOD and RECHARGE influence our FOOD and MOVE
choices Influencers Emotions and Attitudes – MOOD Rest and Energy levels – RECHARGE
• Think Your FOOD o Is this food healthy for my body? o Is this food healthy for my brain? o Am I really hungry or just bored? o Am I eating too much of this food? (i.e. candy) o Am I eating too little of this food? (i.e. vegetables)
• FOOD’s connection to the fit factors o MOVE: FOOD gives us energy to be physically active
• fit recognizes that our MOOD and RECHARGE influence our FOOD choices. o Influencers Emotions and Attitudes – MOOD Rest and Energy levels – RECHARGE
o Choices Nutritional choices – FOOD
o RECHARGE: FOOD choices are impacted by our sleep and rest behaviors
When the body craves sleep, the brain can miscue you to think you are hungry Lack of sleep disrupts hormones that play a role in body weight regulation and
appetite stimulation This disruption in hormones triggers overeating and may also signal the body
to cling to fat stores more tenaciously * Ghrelin (Pronunciation: GREL-in) spikes (increases appetite)
A hormone that signals hunger to the brain; an appetite increaser * Leptin crashes (decreases awareness of being full)
A hormone that regulates the amount of fat stored in the body; signals satiety
o MOOD: FOOD choices are impacted by our emotional state of mind (MOOD) at the moment of our choice
o MOOD impacts FOOD choices Emotional Eating Eat due to feelings, not due to hunger
Mindless Eating Eating while doing something else – i.e., watching TV Not aware of what we are eating or how much we are eating
• Emotional Eating: impact on eating habits o Your emotional state influences why, what, and when you eat. o Eating to feed a feeling: When you quench feelings with comfort food and your stomach isn't growling When you're sad, you eat ice cream or cookies When you're bored, you eat potato chips
• Emotional eating can lead to overeating, because it usually isn’t about fulfilling a need for
nutrients or calories.
• Negative emotional states can lead to unhealthy FOOD choices. o Research has shown that when we are sad, mad, upset, tired, or angry our FOOD
choices have a tendency to be unhealthier than they would be if we were in a positive emotional state (MOOD) and well-rested (RECHARGE). Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2859040/
o Emotional eating can be learned early by well-meaning parents and caregivers. If parents respond to their infant’s emotional needs (MOOD) by feeding the infant,
the infant will confuse hunger with fulfilling emotional needs and will learn to eat when sad, lonely, frustrated, or angry (MOOD). Source: Zero to Three
o Emotional eating often starts early in life and becomes a habit that stays with us into
our adult years. Children are like adults – they may eat as a response to their emotional states
versus actually being hungry. Some emotions associated with emotional eating include: Boredom Stress Sad Mad Tired
o We inadvertently teach children emotional eating. It is common for FOOD to be used as A reward for good behavior. A bribe to motivate a child’s behavior (be good and you get a treat)
FOOD should not be used as a reward for good behavior. This practice encourages emotional eating and emphasizes that FOOD is a
“prize” versus fuel for our bodies.
• What is food to you?
o A means to feel better? o A reward or treat? o Do you Think Your FOOD choices?
• Do you think your FOOD? o Practice mindful eating habits. Mindful eating is being aware of why, what, and how much you are eating, and Being in charge of your food choices.
o Researchers have found that mindfulness and intuitive eating is more effective than
traditional weight-loss programs. Source: Published in the American Journal of Health Promotion: http://ajhpcontents.org/doi/abs/10.4278/ajhp.120404-QUAN-186
• Mindless eating easily happens by
o Being unaware of why, what, and how much you are eating.
• Mindless eating can easily occur when watching television or playing computer games. o It is easy to overeat while watching TV or playing computer games.
o Children who eat while watching TV or playing computer games have little or no
awareness of how much they are eating (mindless eating).
• Children spending time in front of a screen are more at risk for: o Mindless eating o Emotional eating
1. Super-Sized meals 2. Larger bottles of soft drinks 3. Large cookies
o How much are you eating…do you know?
Portion Control Quiz 1. Ask participants if they think they know food serving sizes for
themselves. 2. Have participants complete the Portion Control Quiz during class. 3. After completion, ask participants what they believe is the right
answer. 4. Using the answer sheet, discuss the correct answers.
Closing Point(s): • Know your portion sizes • Know children’s portion sizes • Children sized portions of food and drink are not the same as adults • Know what children should eat or drink for their age
Don’t overfeed children. Children are not always served child sized portions but are served adult sized
portions. Children do not need as much as to eat and drink We are teaching children to overeat by serving them adult serving size portions
o Vegetable and fruit consumption is too low. Need for more vegetables and fruits Vitamins and minerals Fiber Naturally low in calories Quick, natural snack
Why fruits and vegetables are so important Vegetables give children vitamins and minerals that keep them healthy and
help them grow Fruits and vegetables are “nutrient dense” – lots of nutrients but few calories
unless too much butter, cheese, or meat fat is added Fruits and veggies are nutritious and delicious
All forms count Fresh, frozen, canned and dried. It’s all good! FOODs processed within hours of harvest keep flavor and nutritional value Canned FOODs are recipe ready Frozen FOODs require little preparation
o Consumption of sweetened beverages is too high No nutritional value and high calories in sweetened beverages Too much pop is being consumed Children are being served too many sweetened juices with added sugar 70% of children ages 2-5 years old consume at least one sugary drink a day.
1. Distribute the Sugary Drinks Quiz to each participant. 2. Give participants time to complete. 3. Use the answer sheet to discuss the correct answers.
o Were they shocked with the results? o What surprising to learn? o What was not surprising to learn?
Closing Point(s): • Sweetened beverages contain a lot of sugar with little nutrition value • Limit children’s sweetened beverage intake
1. Distribute a quiz to each participant 2. Give participants five minutes to complete 3. Use the answer sheet to discuss the correct answers.
o Were the participants shocked with the results? o What surprised the participants? o What didn’t surprise the participants?
Closing Point(s): • Marketers use media such as television to influence children to want their food
products. • Being aware of this negative influence helps one not to “buy into” the messages that
can encourage an individual to make poor food choices relevant to healthy lifestyle habits.
• Marketers spend a lot of money to influence children so children will influence their parents (the “nag or pester” influence).
• We have work to do and habits to change. We are o Eating too much. o Not eating enough fruits and vegetables. o Drinking too much sugar.
• How did we develop these habits? o Over time, daily choices develop into habits and become Automatic patterns of thought.
• Our FOOD choices are being influenced by external influencers. o Who is influencing our FOOD choices that become habits? o How are we being influenced?
Key FOOD influencers to consider
• Marketers influence our FOOD choices. o Marketers have led us to believe we need sweet FOOD, large portions, fried foods, etc. Marketers take advantage of on our emotional eating tendencies Marketers play to our emotional states (MOOD) to influence our FOOD choices
• Consider who is telling children what to eat. o Marketer influence on unhealthy FOOD choices Too many child targeted commercials promote high-sugar and/or high-fat FOODs.
• Screen time influence on eating
o Children who spend time in front of a screen have a greater tendency to eat the advertised, high-sugar FOOD.
o A 2009 study found that on the average, 5.2 food advertisements were presented every hour during Saturday mornings and weekday afternoons. 12 networks were part of the study including:
Networks that appeal to older youths (MTV, BET), mainstream English-language channels ABC, CBS, NBC, FOX, and UPN
Nearly 1 in 5 advertisements were for a food or nutrition-related product
Fast-food restaurants, sugary food, chips/crackers, and sugar-added beverages collectively accounted for more than 70% of food commercials
34% were for ''food on the run,'' fast-food restaurants and convenience food The Saturday morning 7-10 AM time slot is more saturated with food commercials Approximately 7.7 food commercials per hour appeared in programming on the
children's networks Approximately 1 food commercial every 8 minutes
Source: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/11/091104181155.htm (Report on Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior)
When children focus on TV while eating, they have a tendency to overeat. They are not paying attention to their body’s hunger cues. Mindless eating (MOOD)
Think Your FOOD before you choose
• Think your FOOD. o Don’t let others tell you what to eat.
• Be Mindful - Don’t just eat o Know why you are eating o Know what you are eating o Know how much you are eating
• Be Mindful - manage the internal want and need debate o Want: What our eyes and mind tell us (want)
vs o Need: What is healthy for our body and brain (need)
• Be Mindful - What o What we want to eat
vs o What we need to eat
• Be Mindful - How much o How much we want to eat
vs o How much we need to eat
• Think Your FOOD influencers - Your emotional state (MOOD) o We have emotional connections with FOOD o We have social connections with FOOD
• Think Your FOOD Influencers - Media and marketers o Advertisements and commercials influence our FOOD and drink choices Emotional appeal Good deal; more FOOD for less money
• Think Your FOOD o Reframe your thinking FOOD is fuel for the body and brain vs FOOD is something to make me feel good or satisfy my taste buds
• FOOD is fuel for our bodies to have energy to move, think, and live.
o We need to eat foods that provide energy for our body and mind to function in our days o Fill your body with healthy fuel Fruits and vegetables Milk and water Not foods high in sugar or fat
o Don’t fill your body with too much FOOD fuel When we eat too much, our body stores the extra fuel as fat
• Just like cars run on fuel, so do we. o Bad fuel causes a car to break down. o Eating unhealthy foods can be bad for our health. Cardiovascular disease Diabetes High blood pressure Obesity
• Just like cars only need so much fuel, so do we. o Your body needs enough food to meet the needs of your energy expenditure. Don’t overfill your tank If you fill your car tank too full it overflows If you eat too much food, the food calories overflow to fat storage in your body.
Caregivers are instrumental in helping children learn healthy lifestyle habits to combat the pediatric obesity epidemic.
• You can help kids learn to think their FOOD to make healthy FOOD choices.
• Four things you can do to help kids learn make healthy FOOD choices 1. Teach children to Think Your FOOD
2. Educate the parents 3. Be a good role model 4. Implement best practices in your child care setting
• Why child care? Why you? o Children spend many hours in child care More children are in child care today than ever before and Some spend more time in child care than they do at home.
o Child care is a great setting to teach children to think their FOOD choices.
• Caregivers are in a special position to show children what it means to eat for good health, including how important it is to eat a variety of FOODs. o Learning how to make healthy FOOD choices needs to start when children are young. Children are in child care during these crucial learning years
• You have the opportunity every day to teach children about making healthy FOOD choices o What to eat o How to make healthy FOOD choices o To be aware of hunger body cues
o Children should have education on nutrition at least once a week
• It’s important that young children are educated about making FOOD choices. o Children need to understand the difference between healthy and unhealthy FOOD
choices. o Eating habits established in infancy and early childhood may contribute to suboptimal
eating patterns later in life. Source: Preventing Childhood Obesity in Early Care and Education Program guidelines
• Promoting healthy eating is crucial during the young years. Five key reasons:
o Attitude: During child care years, children are developing an attitude towards FOOD The eating behaviors children practice early in life affect their health and nutrition
and are significant factors in childhood overweight and obesity. These behaviors may continue to shape food attitudes and eating patterns
through adulthood. Source: NAEYC Young Children (March 2011) - The Impact of Teachers and Families on Young Children’s Eating Behaviors
o Habits: If children establish healthy eating habits at a young age, those habits will more than likely follow them through life. Source: NAEYC Young Children (March 2011) - The Impact of Teachers and Families on Young Children’s Eating Behaviors
o Overall Health Benefits: If children eat healthy at a young age, they will have more energy, feel better, and increase their chances to live longer.
o Obesity Prevention: If children start out eating healthy when they are young, their chances of being obese later in life are decreased.
o Ready to Learn: If children start out eating healthy when they are young, they are more ready to learn. Kids learn better when they eat better. Research shows that there are crucial relationships between nutrition and health as
well as nutrition and learning.
• Caregivers can help children get in tune with their hunger cues. Teach them to eat because they are hungry versus eating due to their emotional state at their moment (MOOD). o Preschoolers may say they are hungry when they really mean they are bored, sad, or in
need of attention. To determine if a child is really hungry versus bored, etc. one might suggest that
the child play with a friend or get involved in an activity. Source: https://www.healthykidshealthyfuture.org/content/dam/hkhf/filebox/khchildcareguide.pdf
• Key points to teach the children about FOOD
o Be a fit kid Make healthy FOOD choices for your body and brain.
o FOOD is fuel for bodies Just like cars need good fuel to function, our bodies need good fuel to function. Healthy FOODs are good fuel for our body
o Why eat healthy FOODs? Healthy FOODs Help your body grow. Give you energy to MOVE and play. Give you energy to think.
o fit kids drink milk and water. Milk and water are good for your body.
o fit kids try new fruits and veggies. Fruits and veggies give you energy to play. Fruits and veggies help bodies grow strong and increase energy
Try It! Start with one bite Encourage (do not force) children to try new fruits and vegetables
o fit kids eat slow It can take your stomach awhile to tell your brain you are full (20 minutes), so eat
slowly.
o fit kids eat when they are hungry and stop when they are full. Stop eating if you are full: Listen to your stomach Just because there is FOOD on your plate it doesn’t mean you need to eat it if
o fit kids are smart when watching television Sometimes you might see FOODs that are high in sugar and fat while watching
television; foods like candy, pop or french fries. These foods are not the healthiest choice for our bodies and minds.
Think before you choose what to eat.
Don’t let TV tell you what to eat. Just because you see it on TV does not mean it is a healthy FOOD for your body.
Don’t let cartoon characters tell you what to eat. Just because your favorite cartoon character is on a FOOD package or box doesn’t mean the FOOD is healthy for your body.
Tools to help teach children about healthy FOOD choices • Have books and games available to help children learn about healthy FOOD choices.
o Read books to children about the importance of: Eating fruits and vegetables Drinking milk and water
o Have books and games available for children to learn about the importance of: Eating fruits and vegetables Drinking milk and water
• The fit Jr. Website has many resources to help children learn about FOOD: o fit Jr. Website
• My Plate Activity website location: http://www.choosemyplate.gov/ o Purpose: To teach children to fill their plates with fruits and vegetables o Talking Points: Fill your plate with healthy foods Fruits and vegetables are healthy foods for your body and brain Fruits and vegetables Give us energy to play and grow. Help our body strong. Help our brains to think.
Be sure to fill your plate with healthy fruits and vegetables
• Green and Red Plate Game fit website location:need Sanford URL o Purpose: To teach children the difference between healthy (green plate) and unhealthy
FOODs (red plate). o Talking Points: There are lots of FOODs Some FOODs are better for your body and brain than others The best FOODs for you are healthy FOODs (green plate FOODs) You want to eat healthy FOODs Healthy FOODs are good for you:
* Give your body energy to move and play * Help you grow big and strong * Help you to think smart
Fruits and veggies are healthy FOODs * You should eat fruits and veggies every day
Some FOODs have a lot of sugar and too much sugar is not good for your body (red plate FOODS) You need to stop and think to limit the amount of these FOODs you consume.
Sometimes it is hard to know which FOODs are healthy This game will help you learn what FOODs are healthy for you
• TV Screen Game fit website location:need Sanford URL o Purpose:
To teach children the difference between healthy (green plate) and unhealthy FOOD (red plate) and to
Have an awareness of how the messages we see on TV influence our FOOD choices.
o Talking Points: Some FOODs are healthier for us than others When watching TV we see healthy and unhealthy FOODs We can learn to be smart about the FOODs we see on TV Just because you see it on TV does not mean it is a healthy FOOD for your body
• Healthy Food Hunt fit website location:http://fit.webmd.com/jr/food/pdf/pdf-healthy-food-hunt-game o Purpose: To teach children how to choose healthy snack FOODs. o Talking Points: Sometimes we are hungry for a snack Choose healthy FOODs for your snack Healthy FOODs help your body grow and give you energy to MOVE and play Fruits and vegetables are great snacks
Better Choices Game fit website location: Sanford URL o Purpose: Teach children about healthy FOOD choices with the spotlight tool of red,
yellow, and green. o Talking Points: Fruits and vegetables are a healthy FOOD choice Healthy FOODs help our Muscles grow big and strong. Bones grow strong. Hearts be healthy.
Water and milk are the best drinks to have when you are thirsty. Milk helps us to grow strong bones. Just like plants, our bodies need water to grow.
Green FOODs: In this game, FOODs that are good for our body are green FOODs You want to eat a lot of these every day
* Show an example of a Green FOOD card Yellow FOODs: Some FOODs are okay to eat once in a while In this game, we call these yellow FOODs Slow down and think before you eat these FOODs. Don’t eat too much
* Show an example of a Yellow FOOD card Red FOODs: Some FOODs have a lot of sugar, and too much sugar is not good for your
body In this game, we call these red FOODs. You need to stop and think and only
eat a little bit of these FOODs * Show an example of a Red FOOD card
• I Want to be a Healthy Kid fit website location:Sanford URL o Purpose: To encourage children to make healthy FOOD choices. o Talking Points: Our bodies need healthy FOODs to grow and have energy to MOVE and play. Fruits and vegetables are healthy FOODs for us. Choose to eat fruits and
vegetables. Choose what healthy FOODs you will eat and drink today.
• Award Ribbons -- Fruit and Vegetable Encouragement fit website locations: http://fit.webmd.com/jr/food/pdf/pdf-ate-new-fruit-award http://fit.webmd.com/jr/food/pdf/pdf-ate-vegetable-award o Purpose: To reinforce being a fit kid and healthy FOOD choices. o Talking Points: A fit kid is someone who does things to help their body be healthy One way to be a fit kid is to make healthy choices about what to eat and drink
• FOOD Activity Guide Purpose – Learning experiences throughout the day o Children learn through experiences. o Short term learning is gained when there is limited exposure to information in one day
or week (i.e. a group time topic). o Retained learning occurs when there is continual exposure to learning in multiple play
areas on a consistent basis within the care environment. o Children need to have continual, consistent exposures to learning experiences that
teach them about making healthy choices so that making healthy choices become a habit.
• FOOD Activity Guide - Let’s Eat Activities o Review the MOOD Activity Guide with class o Emphasize the FOOD Point and fit Connection Highlight the following activities: Vegetable Faces Eat a Fruit Rainbow Healthy Snack Choices
• SD Harvest of the Month website o A great resource for Pre-K fruit and vegetable lesson plans
• Let’s MOVE: Childcare Website o A resource to help caregivers provide a healthy childcare environment
http://healthykidshealthyfuture.org/welcome.html (show in class if possible)
2. Educate the Parents Create an awareness of the pediatric obesity issue and FOOD
• You have the opportunity to speak to parents about FOOD and fit. o Partner with parents to help children learn about making healthy FOOD choices
• Educate Parents - Healthy FOOD choices o Many parents want to learn more about nutrition, and childcare is a great place for
parents to learn from you o Look for opportunities to provide nutrition education to parents
• Educate Parents - Healthy habits are learned early in life o Teach healthy lifestyle habits to your children when they are young o Children learn healthy habits at a young age that will follow them into adulthood
• Educate Parents - FOOD is Fuel for our bodies and minds o What and how much fuel our children eat matters o An overweight 3-year-old child is nearly 8 times as likely to become an overweight
young adult compared to a non-overweight developing 3-year-old. Source: www.zerotothree.org
• Educate Parents - Consistent messages and practices o Partner with parents to create consistency in practices and messages between home
and child care If children hear the same messages from parents and child care providers, they are
o Consistent message: No “Clean Your Plate” message Children should eat when they are hungry and stop eating when they are full. No “clean your plate” message Emphasis on having a “clean plate” may hinder children’s recognition of the
internal cues of hunger and satiety and contribute to overeating. It is important for adults to respect the child’s expression of food fullness. Source: NAEYC Young Children (March 2011) - The Impact of Teachers and Families on Young Children’s Eating Behaviors
o Consistent message: Trying it takes time Don’t force children to eat a food It may take several times (10-15) before a child will eat a new food.
Sources: Zero to Three; Guidelines for Health Stepping Stones to Caring for our Children: National health and safety performance standards; Guidelines for early care and education programs, 3rd edition. (2013)
Encourage children to try the food; don’t force children to try the food.
o Consistent practice: Correct portion sizes for kids Feed children correct FOOD and drink portion sizes for their age.
o Consistent practice: Limit sugar practice Limit sugar sweetened beverages and high sugar foods to ensure children are not
getting empty calorie, low nutritional foods and drinks in their diet.
o Consistent practice: Limit marketer influence by limiting television Decrease the influence marketers have on your children’s choices. Limit television watching in your home.
• Create Awareness
o Display posters in your child care facility to create awareness of healthy food and beverage choices. Spoonful of Sugar
fit website location:need Sanford URL More for Less is Not Always a Good Deal
fit website location:need Sanford URL
o Inform parents of the learning activities on nutrition provided in the facility Source: Preventing Childhood Obesity in Early Care and Education Program guidelines
• Provide parents with o Healthy recipes that are quick and inexpensive to prepare. o Information regarding access to local sources of healthy FOODs. o Ideas for healthy and inexpensive snacks, including FOODs available and served at
parent meetings.
• fit parent resources o Provide parents with tools to assist in helping children develop good FOOD habits: I Ate Healthy FOODs Chart
fit website location: http://fit.webmd.com/jr/food/pdf/pdf-healthy-foods-chart Healthy FOOD Hunt
fit website location: http://fit.webmd.com/jr/food/pdf/pdf-healthy-food-hunt-game 2-3 Year Old FOOD Guide
fit website location: http://fit.webmd.com/jr/food/pdf/pdf-how-much-to-feed-chart-2-to-3 4-8 Year Old FOOD Guide
fit website location:http://fit.webmd.com/jr/food/pdf/pdf-how-much-to-feed-chart-4-to-8
3. YOU the Caregiver
• What can caregivers do? How can you help? Change can start with you!
• YOU can promote healthy habits. o Know and promote healthy FOOD habits
o Children may receive between 50% and 75% of their daily calories at the child care
facility. Source: NAPSACC
o Home day care providers are in a special position when it comes to nutrition Family day care providers plan and prepare the meals and are able to choose what
and how much to feed the children in their care. o Center-based providers can help too Sit and eat with the children. Even though center-based child care providers do not prepare the FOOD,
providers can still encourage proper nutrition in the center. * Sit with the children and encouraging the children to eat healthy FOODs
• YOU can promote the importance of being fit. o The importance of all four pieces working together
• YOU can be a fit role model. o RECHARGE Your Energy o Motivate your MOOD o Think Your FOOD…before you make a FOOD choice
o Eat the same foods and beverages as the children during meal and snack times. Specifically fruits and vegetables
o Drink water throughout the day. o Don’t drink soda or other sweetened beverages in front of children. o Don’t eat fast food or foods high in sugar or fat in front of children. o Talk out loud about personal healthy FOOD favorites. “I really like carrots.”
o Talk out loud about being hungry or full. “I am full so I am not going to eat anymore.”
4. Best Practice Review
• Define Best Practices Review (Optional) o Refer to page 23 of the “Be fit…RECHARGE Your Energy” class outline
• Review of Best Practices: What, Why and How o Why (why is this best practice important) Methods that have been proven to work
o What (what is the best practice) What you do to get the best results
o How (how can providers achieve this best practice) Follow the fitCare Student Manual Guidelines
• FOOD Best Practices are reviewed in the fitCare Student Manual.
(Instructor can show class participants the location of the FOOD section in the fitCare Student Manual) o FOOD Best Practices: What, Why, and How Why is this best practice important? What is the best practice? How can providers achieve this best practice?
Policy first
• Have a written policy relative to children’s nutrition.
o Definition of a policy: A written policy is a statement about the importance you give to something in your
child care program.
A written expectation to continually guide the practice of child care leadership and staff in the child care setting.
Helps provide a means to meet the goals of providing children an environment in
which to learn about and practice healthy eating habits.
o Why a written policy is important: Parent Communication: Policy statements can help child care providers and
families understand why healthy food and drink choices are so important relative to children’s health, development, and weight.
You can use a policy statement in your program handbook, descriptions, advertisements, and materials you give parents to inform them of how important healthy food and drink choices are for children’s health, development, and weight.
Staff communication: When new staff starts working at the child care facility, written
policies will help them learn about responsibilities and expectations of the program. Provides guidelines of what to do/what is expected in practice. Ensures consistency in practice.
o Include in your FOOD policy such things as: What foods are provided to the children
What beverages are provided to the children
Support of breastfeeding mothers and their infants Welcome breastfeeding mothers Make sure staff members are trained to handle breast milk and follow mothers’
feeding plans. * Mothers breastfeeding at 6 months was significantly associated with
support from child care providers to feed expressed breast milk to infants and allow mothers to breastfeed on-site before or after work.
Teacher expectation to encourage healthy eating with children Do not offer food to calm down a child Do not offer food as a reward for appropriate behavior
Guidelines on food for holidays and celebrations
Fundraising with non-food items
Staff education on child nutrition to be provided
Parent education on child nutrition to be provided
Planned and informal nutrition education for children to be provided Source: http://gonapsacc.org/resources/nap-sacc materials/Go_NAP_SACC_Child_Nutrition_SelfAssessment.pdf
• Policies don’t have to be complex and hard to write: o Sample FOOD Policy In our program, we provide children with a variety of healthy foods at each meal
(fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and protein). With the exception of infants still being bottle-fed or eating baby food, all children
are offered the same food during meal time (unless an allergy or medical condition is present).
Infants are fed on demand when an infant provides cues of needing to be fed. Children are not forced to “clean” their plates (eat every food item served). FOOD is not used as a reward for good behavior or taken away as a punishment. Children are provided education on the importance of healthy eating once a week.
o Meet the requirements for meals of the child care component of the USDA (U.S. Department of Agriculture) or the CACFP (Child and Adult Care FOOD Program)
o A weekly menu (meals and snacks), Includes a combination of new and unfamiliar FOODs. Includes a variety of colors, flavors, textures, and shapes. Offers dark green, orange, red, or deep yellow vegetables to children. Is available to parents.
o Meal and snack time is child centered and age-appropriate.
o Select and arrange FOOD on plates in ways that make meals interesting and attractive.
o Have appropriate servings available to children throughout their day. Ensure that the children’s daily nutrition needs are met. Small meals of nourishing
food should be scheduled over the course of the day. Young children, under the age of six, need to be offered food every two to three
Source :http://www.cdc.gov/breastfeeding/pdf/2013breastfeedingreportcard.pdf Early childhood programs that support breastfeeding families help women start and
• Think Your FOOD - Top 3 Best Practices o Correct portion sizes o More fruits and vegetables in our daily FOOD intake o Drink less or limit sweetened beverages
• Portion control o Read FOOD labels to know the correct serving o Serve child size servings Foods Drinks
• Encourage children to consume more fruits and vegetables daily. o Even if you don’t prepare the FOOD, You can teach children about fruits and vegetables. You can encourage children to try fruits and vegetables at mealtime and snack
time. You can role model eating fruits and vegetables at mealtime.
Note: French fries, tater tots, and hash browns don't count as vegetables
o The fruits and vegetables challenge It is common for children to not get an adequate intake of fruits and vegetables in
their daily diet Who wants to argue over eating fruits and vegetables?
Encourage children to try vegetables Children have a tendency to not eat vegetables, and they often claim they don’t
like them. Remember, children need to see a new FOOD 10-15 times before they will
actually try it. Do not give up. Sources: Zero to Three; Guidelines for Health Stepping Stones to Caring for our Children: National health and safety performance standards; Guidelines for early care and education programs, 3rd edition. (2013)
Ways to get kids to LOVE their fruits and vegetables (or at least try them!) Serve them creatively Have a party of the senses
Incorporate fruits and vegetables into lessons by trying fruits and vegetables from different places around the world. Veggie Face Activity (FOOD Activity Guide) Eat a Rainbow Activity (FOOD Activity Guide)
Ask participants what has worked for them
• Limit sugar in children’s food and drinks.
o Read the label – check for sugar in fruit drinks and juice. o Soda and fruit drinks are full of sugar and “empty calories” (few nutrients, many
calories). Studies show that children who drink more soft drinks are more likely to be
overweight.
o Serve 100% fruit or vegetable juice without added sweetener: Even 100% juice is high in sugar and provides fewer nutritional benefits than fresh
fruit. It is recommended that children limit their consumption of 100% juice.
* 4-6 ounces of 100% juice twice a week Source: https://gonapsacc.org/resources/nap-sacc-materials/GoNAPSACC_CN_2014.pdf
o Promote and encourage drinking milk: Children two years of age and older should be served skim or 1% pasteurized milk.
Source: Preventing Childhood Obesity in Early Care and Education Program guidelines (Standard 4.3.1.7)
Recommended Serving sizes: 2-3 Year olds: ½ cup 4-5 Year olds: ½ - ¾ cup
o Promote drinking water throughout the day: Water is a simple, inexpensive, healthy beverage choice for children. Replacing sweetened drinks, even 100% juice, with water is an inexpensive and
easy way to help improve children’s health, as well as your budget. Source: http://nrckids.org/index.cfm/products/licensing-toolkits/child-care-providere28099s-action-sheet-use-of-water-and-100-juice/
Drinking water should be readily available and easily accessible, both inside and outside, for children Source: Preventing Childhood Obesity in Early Care and Education Program guidelines Water fountains Sippy cups Insulated plastic glasses with attached straws
o Set up the meal and snack time to encourage healthy eating: Engage with the children during meal and snack time. Sit at the table and eat the meal or snack together. Serve meals family style Serving family style enhances motor skills, language development, table
manners, social skills, self-esteem, and independence. Encourage self-feeding by older infants/toddlers. Promote consumption of fruits and vegetables in your conversations.
o Plan plenty of time for children to eat without feeling rushed. Children are capable of regulating their FOOD intake. It is important to respect the child’s expression of fullness and to follow a schedule
that gives children enough time to eat. Source: NAEYC Young Children (March 2011) - The Impact of Teachers and Families on Young Children’s Eating Behaviors (add to references)
o Allow children “not” to finish eating meals Create a positive eating environment by listening when a child says he/she is full. Discourage the “clean your plate” habit.
Forcing children to eat more than they can handle causes children to eat more than they need and can cause them to Gain weight. Develop a habit of eating even when they are full.
Toddlers may not say they are full, but may start playing or become distracted, shaking their head “no” and not finish.
• Do not use FOOD to manage children’s behaviors.
o Do not use FOOD as a reward or bribe. Do not reward children with FOOD for appropriate behavior.
o Do not withhold FOOD as a punishment. Do not threaten to take FOOD away from children for inappropriate behavior.
• Limit screen time: Minimize Marketer influence
• Provide an environment that encourages children to make healthy choices. o Help children talk through feelings versus eating as a way to deal with feelings (MOOD
connection).
o Provide rest so Children can manage emotions better to make good choices when they are well-
rested (RECHARGE connection). Being tired can cause the brain to send miscued messages of being hungry when
you are really just tired.
o Provide physical activity in a child’s day to expend caloric intake (MOVE connection).
• Ensure staff are educated on o The importance of providing children with healthy FOODs. o The importance of appropriate serving sizes for children. o The importance of fruit and vegetable consumption. o Sweetened beverage consumption and the need to drink water and milk. o The importance of eating with the children and role modeling healthy food and drink
choices and habits. o Staff should have training on children and nutrition at least two times a year.
• Educate children at least once a week o Lesson plans should include teaching the children about the importance of eating fruits
and vegetables. o Lesson plans should include teaching the children about the importance of drinking
water and milk.
• Educate children o Make healthy FOOD choices to provide healthy fuel for your body and brain.
o Understand why it is important to eat fruits and vegetables every day. o Drink water and milk.
o Understand how marketers influence our choices.
• Educate Parents o Serve healthy foods at home. Talk about the importance of providing healthy FOODs at home. Educate parents on the importance of serving age appropriate serving sizes to
their children. Educate parents on the importance of fruit and vegetable consumption. Educate parents on sweetened beverage consumption and the need to drink water
and milk.
• Be a positive role model for children in your care. o Start today. Do one thing to be a good role model. Challenge yourself to start being a good role model for children in your care on how
to Think your FOOD. Eat with children and demonstrate healthy eating.
Do not drink pop or coffee in front of children. Encourage drinking of water and milk.
Self-Assessment Tools
• Practice FOOD fitCare Best Practices o How can you get started? o What can you do?
• Find out how you are doing o Take a FOOD Self-Assessment Check out if you are practicing fitCare FOOD Best Practices Learn what you are doing well Learn what you can improve on Try one new thing to improve your fitCare FOOD Best Practices
• Review FOOD Self-Assessment with participants: o Scoring Review o Planning for Action o Pre-Assessment o Post-Assessment
• Completion options:
o You may complete the Self-Assessment at the end of class or o Take home to complete after class.
• Review Move Challenge - www.healthykidshealthyfuture.org o Complete an online interactive checklist to assess what quality improvements can be
made related to five goals and create a customized action plan. 1. Physical activity 2. Screen Time 3. Food 4. Beverages 5. Infant Feeding
o Upon successful completion of the action plans, caregivers can retake the online assessment and receive a certificate of recognition for their efforts.
Conclusion
• What to remember from today:
• fit recognizes that our MOOD and RECHARGE influence our FOOD and MOVE choices.
o Influencers Emotions and Attitudes – MOOD Rest and Energy levels – RECHARGE
• Being fit is about o Having the right mindset and enough energy
to be able to choose o Healthy foods and to be active
• Be fit -- Think Your FOOD o FOOD is fuel for our body and mind: Energy to MOVE Energy to think Energy to live life
• Healthy eating habits start young. o Children need to be taught healthy FOOD habits.
• Practice fitCare Best Practices. o FOOD Best Practices
• Have a nutrition policy to guide fitCare FOOD Best Practices.
• Insure children are receiving the right portions of FOOD for their age. o Allow children to regulate intake o Do not use the “clean you plate” practice
• Encourage fruit and vegetable consumption by serving daily.
o Encourage children to not eat foods just because they see them on TV or a computer screen. Just because you see it on TV does not mean it is a healthy FOOD for your body Just because your favorite cartoon character is on a FOOD package or box it
doesn’t mean the FOOD is healthy for your body
• Partner with parents o Educate parents about healthy FOOD choices for children o Children learn best when there are consistent messages and practices between home
and child care.
• Be a role model o RECHARGE Your Energy o Motivate your MOOD o Think Your FOOD…before you make a FOOD choice o Eat healthy foods and drink beverages with the children to role model healthy eating
choices. o Talk about making healthy food choices and healthy eating habits to reinforce children’s
awareness. “I really like carrots.” “I am full so I am not going to eat anymore.”
• Practice fitCare Best Practices o Have policies to guide fitCare Best Practice Serve child sized portions Encourage consumption of fruits and vegetables Limit sugar and sweetened beverages
One Thing…I Will Do
1. Closing Activity: One Thing…I Will Do
o Purpose: 1. To have participants acknowledge an action to put into practice based on what they
have learned in class o Materials:
1. One Thing I Will Do Card (Participant keeps this card) o Participant completes One Thing I Will Do Card
Used to track class knowledge gain and participants’ intent to put knowledge into practice • Post-Class Questionnaire
o Participant completes Post-Class Questionnaire Answers Questions 1-10 Copies action noted on One Thing…I Will Do card onto Post-Class Questionnaire
in “One Thing I Will Do” section Completes confidence score Answers class evaluation questions
o Participant turns Post-Class Questionnaire into instructor o Instructor reviews correct answers with participants o Submit fitCare Post-Class Questionnaire to data collection office or designated
Resources 1. American Academy of Pediatrics, American Public Health Association, National Resource Center for Health and Safety in Child
Care and Early Education. 2011. Caring for our children: National health and safety performance standards; Guidelines for early care and education programs. 3rd edition. Elk Grove Village, IL: American Academy of Pediatrics; Washington, DC: American Public Health Association. Also available at http://nrckids.org.
2. “Breastfeeding Report Card: United States”. Center for Disease Control and Prevention, 2013 n.d Web. Spring 2014. 3. "Breast-feeding and Childhood Obesity--a Systematic Review." National Center for Biotechnology Information. U.S.
National Library of Medicine, n.d. Web. Spring 2014. 4. "Bright Futures: Health Care Professionals Tools and Resources." Bright Futures. American Academy of Pediatrics, 2008.
n.d. Web. Spring 2014. 5. “Crediting Handbook for the Child and Adult Care Food Program.” Agriculture, United States Department Of. n.d. Web. Spring
2014. 6. "Child Nutrition Self-Assessment." NapSACC. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina, 2014. Web. Spring 2014. 7. Childhood Obesity Prevention." Early Childhood Obesity Prevention”. Center for Disease Control and Prevention,
Nemours, n.d. Web. Spring 2014. 8. Childhood Overweight and Obesity. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 05 Aug. 2013. Web. Spring 2014. 9. "ChooseMyPlate.gov." ChooseMyPlate.gov. United States Department of Agriculture, n.d. Web. Spring 2014. 10. "Early Experiences Matter." ZERO TO THREE: Homepage. National Center for Infants, Toddlers, and Families, n.d. Web.
Spring 2014. 11. Eliassen, Erin K. "The Impact of Teachers and Families on Young Children's Eating Behaviors." Naeyc.org. NAEYC, Mar.
2011. Web. Spring 2014. 12. "FitSource." U.S. Department of Agriculture. United States Department of Agriculture, 5 May 2014. Web. Spring 2014. 13. G., Md Mary L. Gavin, Md Steven A. Dowshen, and Neil Izenberg. "Child Care Providers Guide: Helping Kids Eat Right
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Mindfulness-Based Intuitive Eating Intervention. American Journal of Health Promotion: July/August 2014, Vol. 28, No. 6, pp. 380-388.
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Adolescence." NIH Public Access. N.p., May 2009. Web. Spring 2014. 26. "Our Nations Leading Voice For Child Care." Our Nations Leading Voice For Child Care. NACCRRA, 8 May 2014. Web.
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consume? a. Water and 100% Fruit Juice b. Milk and 100% Fruit Juice c. Water and Milk d. Sports Drinks and Water
2. Juice for preschool children should be limited to while
in child care: a. Children should not drink juice during child care b. 4-6 ounces once a day c. 4-6 ounces twice a week
3. A typical 12-ounce soda contains about ____
teaspoons of sugar. a. 4 teaspoons b. 8 teaspoons c. 10 teaspoons
4. One 12-ounce can of soda has as much sugar as:
a. 3 servings of Frosted Flakes breakfast cereal b. 1 slice of pecan pie c. 1 cup of chocolate ice cream d. All of the above
5. Soft drinks and fruit drinks (fruitades and fruit punch)
are a major source of added sugar in the American Diet. a. TRUE b. FALSE
6. Americans get about __ teaspoons of sugar a day.
a. 8.9 teaspoons b. 15.7 teaspoons c. 22.2 teaspoons
7. People who consume sugary drinks regularly (one to two cans a day or more) have a __ greater risk of developing type 2 diabetes than people who rarely have such drinks. a. 10% b. 15% c. 26% d. 33%
8. Before the 1950s, standard soft-drink bottles were:
a. 6 ounces b. 6.5 ounces c. 8 ounces d. 10 ounces
9. For each additional 12-ounce soda children consumed each day, the odds of becoming obese is increased by: a. 25% b. 45% c. 50% d. 60%
10. Just one fruit drink, regular soda, or energy drink
contains more added sugar than most young people should consume in an entire day. a. TRUE b. FALSE
consume? a. Water and 100% Fruit Juice b. Milk and 100% Fruit Juice c. Water and Milk (2) d. Sports Drinks and Water
2. Juice for preschool children should be limited to while
in child care: a. Children should not drink juice during child care b. 4-6 ounces once a day c. 4-6 ounces twice a week (6)
3. A typical 12-ounce soda contains about ____
teaspoons of sugar. a. 4 teaspoons b. 8 teaspoons (3) c. 10 teaspoons
4. One 12-ounce can of soda has as much sugar as:
a. 3 servings of Frosted Flakes breakfast cereal b. 1 slice of pecan pie c. 1 cup of chocolate ice cream d. All of the above (3)
5. Soft drinks and fruit drinks (fruitades and fruit punch)
are a major source of added sugar in the American Diet. a. TRUE (4) b. FALSE
6. Americans get about __ teaspoons of sugar a day.
a. 8.9 teaspoons b. 15.7 teaspoons c. 22.2 teaspoons (4)
7. People who consume sugary drinks regularly (one to two cans a day or more) have a __ greater risk of developing type 2 diabetes than people who rarely have such drinks. a. 10% b. 15% c. 26% (5) d. 33%
8. Before the 1950s, standard soft-drink bottles were:
a. 6 ounces b. 6.5 ounces (5) c. 8 ounces d. 10 ounces
9. For each additional 12-ounce soda children consumed each day, the odds of becoming obese is increased by: a. 25% b. 45% c. 50% d. 60% (5)
10. Just one fruit drink, regular soda, or energy drink
contains more added sugar than most young people should consume in an entire day. a. TRUE (1) b. FALSE
Sugary Drink Quiz Sources 1. Harris, Jennifer L., Ph.D, M.B.Aa, Marlene B. Schwartz, Ph.D., and Kelly D. Brownell, Ph.D. "Evaluating Sugary Drink
Nutrition and Marketing to Youth." (n.d.): n. pag. Yale Rudd Center, Oct. 2011. Web. 2014. http://www.sugarydrinkfacts.org/resources/SugaryDrinkFACTS_Report_Conclusions.pdf
2. “Healthy Drinks for Kids." KidsHealth - the Web's Most Visited Site about Children's Health. Ed. Mary L. Gavin. The Nemours Foundation, 01 June 2011. Web. 2014. http://kidshealth.org/parent/nutrition_center/healthy_eating/drink_healthy.html
3. Lehman, Shereen, MS. "Guess How Much Sugar Is in a Can of Soda." About.com Nutrition. N.p., 11 Feb. 2014. Web.
5. “Sugary Drinks and Obesity Fact Sheet." The Nutrition Source. Harvard School of Public Health, n.d. Web. 2014.
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/sugary-drinks-fact-sheet/ 6. Ward D, Morris E, McWilliams C, Vaughn A, Erinosho T, Mazzuca S, Hanson P, Ammerman A, Neelon S, Sommers J,
Ball S. (2014). Go NAP SACC: Nutrition and Physical Activity Self-Assessment for Child Care, 2nd Edition. Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention and Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
1. Children ages 2-5 spend ___ hours per week watching TV videos, and using a game console. a. Less than 10 hours per week b. 20 hours per week c. 32 hours per week
2. Fast-food restaurants, sugary food, chips/crackers, and sugar-added beverages account for ___% of food commercials? a. 25% b. 55% c. 70%
3. What percentage of commercials are for ''food on
the run,'' fast-food restaurants and convenience food? a. 34% b. 53% c. 72%
4. Food advertisers spend large amounts of money
marketing to toddlers. a. TRUE b. FALSE
5. The main reasons food advertisers market to
young children is to: a. Build brand awareness b. Create a desire to want a particular food product c. Create children to influence parents to buy a food
products d. All of the above
6. How often do parents honor children’s food
requests when shopping in the store? a. 33% of the time b. 50% of the time c. 72% of the time
7. A child's first request for a product typically occurs at what age? a. 24 months old b. 30 months old c. 36 months old
8. The most requested first in-store request is:
a. Candy b. Pop c. Cereal
9. Heavy TV viewers follow a diet more similar to
the TV-advertised diet than do lighter viewers? a. TRUE b. FALSE
10. What category of food advertisements to children has increased the most from 2007 to 2013? a. Cereal b. Fast Food c. Bottled Water d. Sports drinks
11. Children’s exposure to ads for candy products
has _______ from 2007 to 2013. a. Decreased b. Stayed the same c. Doubled d. Tripled
12. Reduced media use is insufficient by itself as
food advertising has increased in other types of media children use, such as the Internet. a. TRUE b. FALSE
1. Children ages 2-5 spend ___ hours per week watching TV videos, and using a game console. a. Less than 10 hours per week b. 20 hours per week c. 32 hours per week (4)
2. Fast-food restaurants, sugary food, chips/crackers, and sugar-added beverages account for ___% of food commercials? a. 25% b. 55% c. 70% (1)
3. What percentage of commercials are for ''food on
the run,'' fast-food restaurants and convenience food? a. 34 (1) b. 53% c. 72%
4. Food advertisers spend large amounts of money
marketing to toddlers. a. TRUE (3) b. FALSE
5. The main reasons food advertisers market to
young children is to: a. Build brand awareness b. Create a desire to want a particular food product c. Create children to influence parents to buy a food
products d. All of the above (3)
6. How often do parents honor children’s food
requests when shopping in the store? a. 33% of the time b. 50% of the time (3) c. 72% of the time
7. A child's first request for a product typically occurs at what age? a. 24 months old (3) b. 30 months old c. 36 months old
8. The most requested first in-store request is: a. Candy b. Pop c. Cereal (3)
9. Heavy TV viewers follow a diet more similar to
the TV-advertised diet than do lighter viewers? a. TRUE (2) b. FALSE
10. What category of food advertisements to children has increased the most from 2007 to 2013? a. Cereal b. Fast Food (5) c. Bottled Water d. Sports drinks
11. Children’s exposure to ads for candy products
has _______ from 2007 to 2013. a. Decreased b. Stayed the same c. Doubled (5) d. Tripled
12. Reduced media use is insufficient by itself as
food advertising has increased in other types of media children use, such as the Internet. a. TRUE (1) b. FALSE
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2. "News Bureau | University of Illinois." TV Ads Market Junk Food to Kids, New Study Finds. N.p., 24 Aug. 2005.
Web. 18 July 2014 http://www.news.illinois.edu/news/05/0824junkfood.html
3. Story, Mary, and Simone French. "Food Advertising and Marketing Directed at Children and Adolescents in the
US." National Center for Biotechnology Information. U.S. National Library of Medicine, 10 Feb. 2004. Web. 2014. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC416565/
4. Television (TV) and Children: Your Child:. University of Michigan Health System, Aug. 2010. Web. 2014.
http://www.med.umich.edu/yourchild/topics/tv.htm
5. Yale Rudd Center, Www.yaleruddcenter.org. "Trends in Television Food Advertising to Young People: 2013 Update." (n.d.): n. pag. May 2014. Web. http://www.yaleruddcenter.org/resources/upload/docs/what/reports/RuddReport_TVFoodAdvertising_6.14.pdf