How Did Parents View the Impact of the Curriculum-Based HealthLit4Kids Program Beyond the Classroom?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Context and Setting
2.2. Participants and Data Collection
2.3. Analytical Methods
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Future Research
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
References
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School | Date of Parent Interview | Location | SEIFA †,‡ Decile | Number Children | Number of Parents |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 22/11/2017 | Inner Regional | 8 | 297 | 2 |
2 | 6/11/2018 | Inner Regional | 2 | 289 | 2 |
3 | 20/11/2018 | Inner Regional | 7 | 597 | 1 |
4 | 21/11/2018 | Outer Regional | 2 | 366 | 2 |
TOTAL | 7 |
Words | Example Quote | Sub Themes | Themes |
---|---|---|---|
Love | Arabella loves going out there and grabbing stuff out of the garden and going into the kitchen and cooking. | Physical Activities | Student Engagement |
They [children] love walking, exercising, riding bikes—they know what’s good for them. I can’t argue with that. | |||
Games and sport, they loved trying the yoga at the expo. Lots of kids commented on that. | Practical Activities | ||
Excited | I know they did snow globes. Yeah, and he was really excited to make his snow globe. | ||
Great time | My son’s class did healthy lunchboxes. They loved it. They had a great time doing that and it was really good. | ||
Fruit | And he’s now only put two pieces of fruit in his lunchbox for recess and that was his choice. It made a huge difference to him. | Diet | Behaviour Change |
We’ve certainly got a lot more fruit in the house. They’ve even been having a piece of fruit for dessert, we have icy-poles and ice-cream in the fridge, but they’ll go and a couple of times Jordan said, “Well we’re better off to have a piece of fruit” and he’ll go and do that, so it’s been great. | |||
Salad | So my son, his diet changed a little bit in terms of tacos to wraps. He’ll eat a salad for lunch, so that’s been an outcome which is good. | ||
Bike | He’s done some research and he wants a new bike, because he’ll use his bike and it’s good exercise. His friends have organised to go to the pool a couple of times and he said, “That’s good exercise, mum.” | Exercise | |
It’s made a big impact on Jordan because they counted their calories about what they ate over a couple of days, and it affected him hugely he now thinks about he actually said, “I’ve had a thousand more calories today than what I should have had, because I’ve had Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC). You need to take me for a bike ride.” And that is amazing. | |||
Calm | There are a few times when I get a bit stressed, you know, of a morning, come on, and she’d say to me, “Oh, maybe you should get one of the things out of the carton of calm and look,”. So I feel like she’s really taking it in and putting it into practice as well. | Mental health | |
Sugar | I’ve seen Abby have a look—in the last few weeks she’s been looking on the back of packets to see how much sugar’s in it, because she said, “I should only have six teaspoons a day,” and she said, “I’m only going to put half a teaspoon on top of my Weetbix instead of a whole teaspoon.” | Nutritional Information | |
One of the main things that my daughter’s class did was looked at the side of the cereal boxes and they compared them, so how much sugar and how much salt. So after that she came home and she got out our cereal boxes and compared, and so that was one thing that I really thought yeah, that’s good. | |||
Fair | I think having the artefacts at the fair, that was a lot of excitement and it was very beautiful. | Celebration | Parent Engagement |
So normally at a school fair it’s a sausage and it’s a barbecue and there’s face painting and all that, but to actually have some school content in there as well, I thought that was absolutely fantastic. They’re really, really good. | |||
Show | That afternoon, when it was open for the parents to come in, the fact that there were things for the children to show that they’d been doing, got a lot more parents in than what we would’ve had otherwise, so I think that’s a really good idea. | ||
Idea | Tracy (Teacher) did that cook book with all the different healthy [lunches and stuff] which is a really good idea because there are a few lunchboxes that are all pre-packaged high sugar. | Healthy Ideas | |
Even where they had that wall of lunchbox ideas, if they had little booklets of healthy lunchbox ideas or recipes. Something that encourages parents to actually take on a bit of healthier habit. | |||
Invite | Maybe when each class was doing their projects, if parents had been invited to be involved, I think that they would’ve been more likely to. I think some parents are a bit funny about not really knowing when to offer to do parent help. | Invitation | |
Where parents know that they’re actually invited to be part of something particular that benefits their child and their family, I think is how to get some of those people that are not naturally community minded. | |||
Informed | I think maybe just keep everybody informed. Everybody saw the ad in the newsletter that there was a health literacy expo coming but I don’t know that they necessarily really knew what was going on before that, to then know what it was about. | School-Parent Communication | |
Principal | It was in the principal’s report last time, she mentioned the types of things that’d happened and how great it was. | ||
Newsletter | Probably there’s been some communication through the school app, so if there hasn’t been then there’s an opportunity there. I think it was in the school newsletter through the apps. That’s another good thing. | ||
Discuss | When she brought the plate home she’d go through the foods on her plate and she explained to me why salami’s a sometimes food and stuff like that and how all the vegetables are always foods. There was a lot of discussion around food. | Student-Parent Communication | |
[Millie] would discuss things with me. The girls will jump in the car and tell us exactly what happened every day at school. | |||
Involved | I think one thing we do need to try and find is a way to get more parents involved doing stuff | Time | |
We struggle to get parents to get involved. I think it’s a time thing. There’s a lot of people that are—where both parents are working. |
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Nash, R.; Cruickshank, V.; Flittner, A.; Mainsbridge, C.; Pill, S.; Elmer, S. How Did Parents View the Impact of the Curriculum-Based HealthLit4Kids Program Beyond the Classroom? Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 1449. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17041449
Nash R, Cruickshank V, Flittner A, Mainsbridge C, Pill S, Elmer S. How Did Parents View the Impact of the Curriculum-Based HealthLit4Kids Program Beyond the Classroom? International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(4):1449. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17041449
Chicago/Turabian StyleNash, Rosie, Vaughan Cruickshank, Anna Flittner, Casey Mainsbridge, Shane Pill, and Shandell Elmer. 2020. "How Did Parents View the Impact of the Curriculum-Based HealthLit4Kids Program Beyond the Classroom?" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 4: 1449. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17041449
APA StyleNash, R., Cruickshank, V., Flittner, A., Mainsbridge, C., Pill, S., & Elmer, S. (2020). How Did Parents View the Impact of the Curriculum-Based HealthLit4Kids Program Beyond the Classroom? International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(4), 1449. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17041449