This cross-sectional study investigated the current status of delivering nutrition education in Shanghai K-12 schools, determined the potential barriers to the process of delivering nutrition education, and explored the possible practices of future performance.
4.1. Current Status and Barriers of Delivering Nutrition Education in Shanghai
The China NPFND 2014–2020 recognized the importance of nutrition education for a healthy life [
20]. School is a good setting to implement nutrition education due to its high accessibility to children and adolescents [
14,
15]. In this study, more than 88.0% of the participants responded that they were willing to teach nutrition, indicating that the majority of teachers were aware of the necessity of delivering nutrition education at an early age. In spite of this awareness, our data revealed that nutrition education in Shanghai was at formative stage and had a long way to go before delivering effective education.
Based on our study, although 79.9% of the teachers had taught some nutrition, only 26.3% of them spent ≥1 h per school year to teach nutrition courses. This figure was much lower than the national average of 13 h per school year (h/year) reported in the 2000 National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) of K-5 survey in America [
29], and also much lower than the median value of 3.4 h/year of nutrition and dietary behavior instruction for elementary schools in America in 2006 [
30]. It has been reported that a minimum of 15 h of nutrition instruction is required to initiate a change in knowledge and 50 h to retain lasting alteration in attitudes and behaviors [
31]. Therefore, the teaching hours according to our study are far from being enough to deliver effective nutrition education.
The qualification of the teachers in Shanghai was questionable for delivering nutrition education. Less than 20.0% of the teachers in our study received formal education in nutrition in college, more teachers (44.7%) received occasional training courses, and 21.8% of the teachers never received training for nutrition education. It should be noted that educational background of occasional courses or lectures may not prepare teachers with the ability to deliver nutrition education to others. Even the extent of education background at the college level may have a wide range and may not fully prepare the teachers. The absence of training was not unique in our study. A survey in South Africa revealed that only 15.0% of the teachers had received nutrition training [
32]. Insufficient formal training probably leads to the lack of nutrition knowledge, which in our data served as one of the barriers of not teaching nutrition. In another study from Shanghai, primary health teachers (
N = 165) also reported high interest (86.1% of them were willing to offer nutrition instruction for the prevention of childhood obesity), but low qualification (52.7% indicated a lack of ability to teach nutrition) [
22]. It was reported that providing training to trainers (e.g., teachers) had the potential to help students adhere to healthy diets [
33,
34] and prevent childhood overweight [
35]. Yet, the challenges to deliver successful TOT programs may lie in the fact that the training opportunities are scarce and training providers are not available or qualified [
36,
37], as well as the teachers not having enough time or not being interested.
Schools are important places to deliver policies, acts, or interventions [
18]. Studies have reported that the lack of understanding about the importance of nutrition education in school administrators was a significant barrier to deliver nutrition education [
26,
38], which is consistent with our findings. In our study, more than 31.3% of the teachers who never taught nutrition courses claimed that teaching nutrition was not required by school administrators. It is also necessary to recognize that lack of a requirement to teach may not reflect a lack of understanding the importance of nutrition education. For example, the entrance exams in China generally include traditional subjects of language, mathematics, etc., but not nutrition or food science; the school administrators may therefore emphasize the requirements of the traditional curriculum, but not nutrition or other subjects [
39]. Health teachers from private schools in our data were more likely to teach longer or more willing to teach than those from public schools. This may be partially explained by the fact that the examination-oriented schools (public schools belong to this type) usually offer less courses on nutrition education than the exclusive private schools (belong to quality-oriented schools). Overall, both school administrators and teachers need to increase the perception of nutrition education by both recognizing the importance and setting up the requirements for detailed practices.
One major barrier for health teachers in providing nutrition instruction in our study was that other teachers were providing it. It should be noted that nutrition education in China is not delivered by specialized nutrition teachers, but by other teachers who teach health, biology, or even physical education [
22,
40,
41]. Nevertheless, health teachers are the major figures to deliver nutrition education in China [
22]. This was also the truth in our data, showing that 79.9% of health teachers had experience in teaching nutrition, but only 7.9% (72 of 904) of them did not teach it for the reason of other teachers doing it. Currently, nutrition is not the compulsory subject in China, and the delivery of nutrition education may depend on the interest of teachers in taking nutrition as part of their primary courses [
22]. A good practice may be to increase the interest of teachers in nutrition instruction. Health teachers may be more eligible figures than other teachers since nutrition is closer to health than other subjects.
School level characteristic may be also an important factor to be addressed in association with nutrition education. Our study found health teachers from higher school levels were less likely to teach nutrition than those from kindergartens, although teachers from primary schools spent more hours teaching nutrition than the kindergarten teachers. Both students and teachers from examination-oriented schools in China, especially those from higher schools, face the pressure of entrance exams and therefore may possibly ignore the delivery of nutrition education [
39]. One thing that needs to be addressed is which school level (kindergartens, primary schools, middle and high schools) may serve as the best setting for delivering nutrition education—this needs to be investigated for the implications of future practices and research.
Our study also identified health teachers who were male and less concerned about nutrition had poorer performance in delivering nutrition education. Given that most teachers were female (83.4%) and from kindergarten (41.4%), the sex difference on nutrition education in our data was biased by school level and therefore lacks value for implication. Teachers’ concern about nutrition represents one of the aspects of nutrition attitude, which has been reported to affect the delivery of nutrition education based on the general system theory [
24]. This is important given that teachers’ attitude on nutrition may influence the attitude of students.
4.2. Implications for the Practice of Delivering Nutrition Education
Our study showed that more than 40% of the teachers considered being trained by nutrition experts as one of the key strategies to promote future performance. This finding was consistent with other studies where teachers admitted inadequacy at teaching nutrition and expressed their need for training despite many years of teaching experience [
42,
43]. Both our study and literature highlighted the importance of training teachers.
The government and school administrators should recognize the requirement of teaching nutrition and provide sufficient resources for helping the training of teachers. Taking South Korea as an example, the Korean Nutrition Teacher System was implemented in 2006 and started employing nutrition teachers since 2007 according to the Elementary and Secondary Education Act and School Meals Act [
26]. Since then, 11,313 out of 11,575 schools had hired either nutrition teachers or school dietitians (49.6% of the total hires were nutrition teachers) according to the data from Korean Ministry of Education in 2013 [
26]. The Korean nutrition teachers need to be qualified with both a teacher license as well as a dietitian license for providing meal services together with nutrition education [
44]. Many universities in Korea opened special graduate programs to educate and train nutrition teachers [
44]. Although the standards of nutrition education in Korean schools (such as minimum hours of classroom education or curriculum, etc.) have not been established, the nutrition teachers have tried various creative approaches (such as special class hours, discretional or club activities, experiential learning, etc.) [
44]. The Korean Nutrition Teacher System is worth learning since China does not hire specialized nutrition teachers to deliver nutrition education in K-12 schools [
22,
40].
The topics of nutrition courses may include the knowledge about the relationship between diets and health, the Chinese dietary guidelines, the nutrients and their food sources, the methods of choosing and preparing healthy food, etc. [
45]. These courses need plenty of time for the students in order to change knowledge, and more time to change attitudes and behaviors. Our data related to insufficient teaching hours on nutrition education in Shanghai health teachers highlighted the urgency for necessary practices. Meanwhile, it is also important to avoid a too-heavy workload for teachers, which has been regarded as one of the barriers to performing nutrition education [
26].
It has been reported that teaching a nutrition course by either integrating it into other subjects or setting it as a separate subject enables nutrition information to reach learners [
46]. According to the survey by U.S Department of Education, one-third of the teachers taught nutrition as a separate subject, while the same proportion integrated it into other subjects [
29]. In our study, more teachers were willing to integrate nutrition education into health courses rather than offer an independent course. Compared to being integrated into other courses, nutrition education being offered as an independent course means the teachers probably spend more hours teaching it. Considering the finding of our study that the teaching hours in Shanghai K-12 schools were insufficient, setting a nutrition course as the independent subject may be a useful strategy to promote nutrition education.
Nutrition knowledge could be presented in varied forms including lectures, active classroom discussions, cooperative or collaborative work, as well as student projects, media presentations, role playing, etc. Resources including booklets, magazines, brochures, leaflets, posters, TV or radio channels, etc., may enhance the effective delivery of nutrition education in schools [
15]. These resources help to create a school environment that is friendly for the students to reach nutrition messaging.
Additionally, nutrition education should not be limited to schools, but also include family and social network [
47,
48]. As referenced by China NPFND 2014–2020, reinforcing nutrition education in parents is also an important goal to be achieved [
20]. Parents or grandparents who live with the children are usually their role models. When nutrition knowledge from school conflicts with what the students acquire from their parents or grandparents, such conflict may hinder the acceptance of new knowledge and its ability to modify behavior. Additionally, parents can request that their schools teach more nutrition, especially in the schools in which teachers have a high level of unwillingness to teach. The family support of nutrition education can be impaired or reinforced by social networks. Parents or grandparents are more likely to receive nutrition knowledge from media coverage than formal education. And in this case, the media coverage should provide correct and useful knowledge for delivering nutrition education to the family members. The social network may also facilitate nutrition education in schools. Social media may improve schools’ awareness of how important nutrition is and how it can be taught. Such awareness may facilitate the allocation of resources and benefit nutrition education.
4.3. Implications for Research on Delivering Nutrition Education
The findings of our study highlighted serval major implications for research needs on delivering nutrition education in schools in China.
First, research needs to investigate the current status and barriers of delivering nutrition education in different areas of China. Our findings revealed the insufficient teaching hours of nutrition courses in Shanghai K-12 schools. Given that Shanghai is the megacity of China and usually has more resources, those smaller cities and rural areas of China are possibly poorer in delivering nutrition education. Also, both students and teachers from these areas may have poorer knowledge, attitudes, and practices (KAP) with regard to nutrition education than those from megacities [
28]. The successful delivery of nutrition education needs to address its current status and barriers in order to advance.
Second, research needs to assess the effectiveness of current and future education in nutrition in students. The short teaching hours of nutrition courses in our study was questionable for delivering effective nutrition education. Although the China NPFND set the goal of delivering nutrition education in schools, it did not include a nutrition curriculum for teachers to follow nor set the requirement for minimum hours of classroom curriculum [
20]. There is lack of literature from China investigating such minimum hours for successful education in nutrition. Some intervention studies in K-12 school students from China reported better performance on the nutrition KAP after a short-term (typically months) but intensive education program [
49,
50]. It is important to know the effectiveness of delivering nutrition education across several aspects: (1) How long and how intensive of the education can be effective in changing the KAP (especially practices) of the students; (2) what forms of education, either independently or combined, can be effective; (3) how long can the change of better KAP be maintained after the end of successful education; (4) what is the difference of schools’ (or students’) characteristics on such effectiveness. Giving school-level characteristics as an example, the most cost-effective level needs to be identified so that the delivery of nutrition education can be emphasized in certain levels of schools (kindergarten, primary or middle schools, etc.).
Third, research needs to assess and develop a successful TOT program. Both our study and the literature highlighted the education or training requirement for the teachers [
20,
26]. The Korean Nutrition Teacher System is a good example by hiring nutrition teachers who received education training from universities through special graduate programs [
44]. China may learn from Korea by hiring specialized nutrition teachers. If this cannot be done, China needs to train its own teachers (mainly health teachers) with effective programs. Currently, there are some localized TOT programs reported in our study and in the literature [
51,
52]. However, few of them have been assessed and generalized to country level.
Fourth, research needs to assess and develop policies for building effective school environments. The health teachers from our study identified two reasons for not teaching nutrition, including; the education not being required by school administrators and a lack of school support. School administrators are critical for a nutrition-education-friendly school environment to flourish [
53]. While the China NPFND set the goal of school involvement, it did not offer detailed policies for schools to follow [
20]. Once developed and validated by research, policies can be generalized to country level to help school administrators and teachers recognize the importance of nutrition education and effectively allocate the resources.
Fifth, research need to assess and develop strategies involving both school and family environment to deliver nutrition education. The China NPFND also set the goal of parental involvement in nutrition education [
6], yet it was not examined in this study. Studies have found the combination of interventions addressing both school and family to be more effective than single setting [
50]. Nutrition education needs to reach students, teachers, and parents as targets. Research is needed for the effect of school–family interaction on promoting nutrition education.