Effectiveness of Gardening-Only, Cooking-Only and Combined Cooking and Gardening Programs in Elementary Schools to Improve Fruit and Vegetable Intake: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
2.2.1. Population
2.2.2. Interventions
2.2.3. Outcomes
2.2.4. Study Design
2.3. Exclusion Criteria
2.4. Data Extraction and Synthesis
2.5. Quality Appraisal of Included Studies
Article Title and Number | Article Information (Author, Year, Country, Journal) | Study Design | Sample | Study Intervention Details | Study Duration | Relevant Outcomes | Statistical Significance | Grade |
Gardening Programs | ||||||||
1. The Effects of Nutrition Education and Gardening on Attitudes, Preferences, and Knowledge of Minority Second to Fifth Graders in the Rio Grande Valley Towards Fruit and Vegetables | Nolan et al., 2012 [13], Rio Grande Valley of Texas, USA, HortTechnology | Quasi-experimental with pre-test and post-test; No control group | n = 141 (2nd–5th graders) | Junior Master Gardner (JMG) program curriculum taught by trained teachers in classrooms | 7 months (August–March) | Positive change in preference for fruits/vegetables (F and V) after participation Positive change in preference for F and V as a snack choice | p = 0.011 p = 0.001 | Low |
2. Effects of Integrating Garden-Based Learning and E-learning into Life Education | Chen ML et al., 2013 [12], Taiwan, Life Science Journal | Quasi-experimental study; No control group | n = 31 (3rd grade) | 40 min intervention 3 times a week, for a total of 15 weeks based on “Planting Vegetables” unit; included weekly computer class session | 15 weeks | Preference for garden-based learning (GBL) and e-learning Learning effects for GBL and cooperative learning | p = 0.047 p = 0.037 | Low |
3. Evaluation of the Impact of A School Gardening Intervention on Children’s Fruit and Vegetable Intake: a Randomized Controlled Trial | Christian MS et al., 2014 [18], London, UK, International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | Cluster-randomized controlled trial; Control group | n = 641 (3–11 year old) | Royal Horticultural Society (RHS)-led vs. teacher-led (control); used curriculum based on social cognitive theory to change attitudes and behaviors related to gardening/fruits and vegetables | 18 months | Borderline significant difference in combined F and V intake in unadjusted model (teacher-led had small increase) No significant difference in fruit, vegetables, or combined F and V intake between the two groups in adjusted model | p = 0.05 p = 0.06 | High |
4. Farm to Elementary School Programming Increases Access to Fruits and Vegetables and Increases their Consumption Among Those with Low Intake | Yoder et al., 2014 [19], Wisconsin, USA, Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | Quasi-experimental; No control group | n = 1117 (3rd–5th grade) | Used national Farm to School program/curriculum that includes logical approaches to improving students’ knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors surrounding F and V consumption | 2010–2011 academic year (~10 months) | Increases in attitudes, knowledge, exposure, and willingness regarding F and V Increase in variety of F and V available on cafeteria trays | p < 0.001 p < 0.001 | Low |
5. School Food Gardens: Fertile Ground for Education | Beery et al., 2014 [20], Johannesburg, South Africa, Health Education | Descriptive case study; No control group | 60 grade 1–7 classes (Exact participant number not reported) | School food garden project implemented by Siyakhana Initiative for Ecological Health and Food Security to promote health among young people; strong focus on health education; weekly presence/sessions | 1 year | Gardens played a role in changing mindset around healthy eating and increasing knowledge of growing, eating, and preparing fruits and vegetables | p values not obtained d/t study design | Very low |
6. Teens-As-Teachers Nutrition Program Increases Interest in Science Among Schoolchildren and Fosters Self-Efficacy in Teens | Bolshakova VLJ et al., 2018 [21], California, USA, California Agriculture | Mixed methods; control group | Intervention n = 71; control n = 22 (2nd and 3rd grade) | Healthy Living Ambassador (HLA) Program; after-school garden-based curriculum with hands-on activities to teach about nutrition, fitness, gardening and present a comprehensive and ecological approach to healthy living | 10 weeks | Between groups: Increase in preference towards gardening Increase in preference towards cooking No significant increase in preference towards vegetables | p = 0.002 p = 0.044 p = 0.083 | Moderate |
7. Increasing Fruit and Vegetable Intake with Reservation and Off-Reservation Kindergarten Students in Nevada | Emm S et al., 2019 [22], Nevada, USA, Journal of Agriculture, Food Systems, and Community Development | Quasi-experimental; no control group | n = 45 American Indian kindergarten students n = 486 off-reservation kindergarten students | Veggies for Kids program which is under SNAP-Ed was taught over 12 weeks; this program uses traditional foods, tribal language, and gardening experiences to help introduce healthy eating and increase F and V intake | 2017–2018 academic school year | Pre–post test difference in correctly identifying MyPlate food groups (both groups) Pre–post test difference in correctly naming selected F and V and willingness to try (off-reservation) Percentage of American Indian students who correctly named F and V and willingness to try (on-reservation) | p < 0.001 p < 0.001 p < 0.01 | Low |
8. Effect and Process Evaluation of A Real-World School Garden Program on Vegetable Consumption and its Determinants in Primary School Children | Huys N et al., 2019 [23], Ghent, Belgium, Plos One | Quasi-experimental; control group | n = 350 (149-intervention; 201-control); grades 1–6 | ‘Taste Garden’ developed by Logo Gezong+; 9-week school garden program based on intervention mapping approach and the PRECEED-PROCEED model and addresses determinants of vegetable consumption (awareness, knowledge, social influence, self-efficacy and attitudes) | ~7 months (June–December) | Positive intervention effect for knowledge regarding vegetable consumption Vegetable consumption b/w groups Determinants of vegetable consumption: Attitude (not significant) Self-efficacy (significant) | p = 0.02 p < 0.01 p = 0.07 p < 0.01 | Moderate |
9. Effects of A School Based Intervention on Children’s Physical Activity and Healthy Eating: A Mixed-Methods Study | Khan M and Bell R, 2019 [24], London UK, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | Quasi-experimental mixed methods; control group | n = 60 from Year 5 classes; 30 in each group | Outdoor activities related to gardening, growing of food and environmental improvement every Monday afternoon for two hours | 2018–2019 academic school year | Between group differences: Daily fruit consumption Daily vegetable consumption Attitude to eating vegetables Attitude to eating fruits Preference for vegetables Preference for fruits (None were significant) | p = 0.728 p = 0.346 p = 0.085 p = 0.480 p = 0.078 p = 0.229 | Moderate |
Cooking Programs | ||||||||
Article Title and Number | Article Information (author, year, country, journal) | Study Design | Sample | Study Intervention Details | Study Duration | Relevant Outcomes | Statistical Significance | Grade |
10. Cooking with Kids Positively Affects Fourth Graders’ Vegetable Preferences and Attitudes and Self-Efficacy for Food and Cooking | Cunningham-Sabo L and Lohse B, 2013 [14], Colorado, USA, Childhood Obesity | Randomized controlled assessment; control group | n = 257 (4th grade) | Cooking with Kids (CWK) is an experiential school-based food education program used to influence fruit/vegetable preference, food/cooking attitudes, and self-efficacy to cook; trained food educator taught cooking and tasting lessons | 10 weeks (spring semester 2013) | Fruit preference (CWK vs. control) Baseline to follow-up Follow-up Vegetable preference (CWK vs. control) Baseline to follow-up Follow-up Attitudes towards food and cooking (CWK vs. control group) Baseline Baseline to follow-up Follow-up Cooking self-efficacy (CWK vs. control) Baseline to follow-up Follow-up | p = 0.087 p = 0.012 p = 0.007 p = 0.001 p = 0.002 p = 0.029 p < 0.001 p < 0.001 p < 0.001 | High |
11. Cooking Up Diversity. Impact of A Multicomponent, Multicultural, Experiential Intervention on Food and Cooking Behaviors Among Elementary-School Students from Low-Income Ethnically Diverse Families | Chen Q et al., 2014 [25], California, USA, Appetite | Mixed method quasi-experimental; control group | n = 604 (intervention); n = 600 (control) kindergarten-2nd grade | Piloted program; promoted ethnic produce through classroom food demonstrations, tastings, and home cooking activities; parents involved with home cooking activities/food kits and recipe development | February to May 2012 (4 months) | Preference for (napa cabbage, black beans, butternut squash, jicama, snap peas, bell peppers, and asparagus) Frequency of eating (napa cabbage, black beans, butternut squash, jicama, snap peas, bell peppers, and asparagus) Involvement in food preparation at home | p = (0.029, 0.004, <0.001, <0.001, <0.001, <0.001, and <0.001) p = (0.783, 0.400, 0.066, 0.008, 0.109, 0.017, and 0.001) p = 0.008 | Low |
12. Impact of A School-Based Cooking Curriculum for Fourth-Grade Students on Attitudes and Behaviors Is Influenced by Gender and Prior Cooking Experience | Cunningham-Sabo L and Lohse B, 2014 [26], USA, Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | Pre–post, quasi-experimental with 2 cohorts | n = 3135 (3rd–5th grade) | Participants were divided into 3 cohorts. One received no treatment, and the other two were exposed to either 5 2-h cooking lessons and/or 5 1-h fruit/vegetable tasting lessons. | 1 year | Cooking with kids positively affected fruit and vegetable preference Independent of treatment, students without cooking experience had more than twice the gains in cooking self-efficacy Improved cooking attitudes Between groups: Total vegetable intake Total fruit intake | p = 0.045 and 0.033 p = 0.004 p = 0.003 p = 0.003 p = 0.490 | |
13. Impact of A School-Based Intervention to Promote Fruit Intake: A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial | Rosario R et al., 2016 [27], Portugal, Public Health | Cluster randomized controlled trial; control group | n = 464 (6–12 years old) | Based on Health Promotion Model and social cognitive theory to encourage children to be more active and make better food selections; Twelve 3-h cooking sessions | 6 months | Between groups: Fruit eaten as dessert at lunch Fruit eaten as dessert at dinner | p = 0.001 p = 0.012 | High |
14. Preparing and Sharing Food: A Quantitative Analysis of A Primary School-Based Food Intervention | Ensaff H et al., 2016 [28], UK, Journal of Public Health | Longitudinal comparative study; control group | n= 338 (3rd–6th grade) | Jamie Oliver’s Kitchen Garden Project occurred for 90 min every two weeks where they cooked and prepared dishes and were provided with recipes to take home | 2012–2013 academic year | Between schools: Overall cooking experience Intervention group: Increased helping w/cooking at home Increased liking for cooking | p = 0.03 p = 0.034 p = 0.004 | Moderate |
15. Effectiveness of A Childhood Obesity Prevention Programme Delivered Through Schools, Targeting 6 and 7 Year Olds: Cluster Randomised Controlled Trial (WAVES Study) | Adab P et al., 2017 [29], United Kingdom, British Medical Journal | cluster randomized controlled trial; control group | n = 53 UK schools [(intervention group consisted of 26 schools and 660 students); (control group consisted of 28 schools and 732 students)] | Implementation, also known as the WAVES intervention, consisted of 2 main goals: to increase children’s physical activity and to improve their nutrient intake. Methods to reaching these goals included 30 additional minutes of physical activity, colored informative signage, cooking workshops. and a six-week cooking/sport component. | 12 months | Mean BMI z-score was non-significantly lower in intervention group compared with control group No statistically significant differences between groups for fruit and vegetable intake | p = 0.18 p = 0.447 | Moderate |
16. Impact of A School-Based Culinary Nutrition Education Program on Vegetable Consumption Behavior, Intention, and Personal Factors Among Korean Second-Graders | Bai et al., 2018 [30], South Korea, Nutrition Research and Practice | Quasi-experimental; control group | n = 71 (2nd grade) | Implemented “Veggiecation” which is a nutrition education program aimed at increasing children’s acceptance and intake of vegetables through learning and engaging activities | 4 weeks | Intervention group: Vegetable consumption behavior Vegetable consumption intention Vegetable consumption attitude Vegetable consumption preference Between groups: Self-efficacy to consume vegetables | p < 0.05 p < 0.05 p < 0.01 p < 0.001 p < 0.01 | Moderate |
17. Effects of A Nutrition Education Intervention on Fruit And Vegetable Consumption-Related Dietary Behavioural Factors Among Elementary School Children | Saha et al., 2020 [31], Texas, USA, Health Education Journal | Quasi-experimental; no control group | n = 115 (3rd–5th grade) | Curriculum based on social cognitive theory included weekly nutrition education, cooking demonstrations, and tasting sessions | 6 weeks | General F and V knowledge Serving sizes of F and V Benefits of F and V consumption F and V preference F and V eating self-efficacy F and V cooking self-efficacy | All were p < 0.001 | Low |
Cooking and Gardening Combined Programs | ||||||||
Article Title and Number | Article Information (author, year, country, journal) | Study Design | Sample | Study Intervention Details | Study Duration | Relevant Outcomes | Statistical Significance | Grade |
18. The Impact of a School Garden and Cooking Program on Boys’ and Girls’ Fruit and Vegetable Preferences, Taste Rating, and Intake | Jaenke et al., 2012 [32], New South Wales, Australia, Health Education and Behavior | Quasi experimental; control group | n = 127 (5th–6th grade) | Nutrition education curriculum, planting/tending to a garden based on social cognitive theory, production of a cookbook and participation in kitchen-based activities that included vegetables from the garden | 10 weeks | Between groups Willingness to taste vegetables (boys) Fruit intake (boys/girls) Vegetables intake (boys/girls) Willingness to taste vegetables (girls) | p = 0.03 p = 0.93/<0.01 p = 0.67/0.72 p = 0.03 | Moderate |
19. A School Gardening and Healthy Snack Program Increased Aboriginal First Nations Children’s Preferences Towards Vegetables and Fruit | Triador et al., 2015 [33], Alberta, Canada, Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | Quasi-experimental; no control group | n = 117 (1st–6th grade) | Based on social cognitive theory; planted and tended to a garden while also preparing and eating what grew in the garden | 7 months | Preference for fruits, vegetables, and fruit and vegetables combined | p < 0.17 | Low |
20. LA Sprouts: A 12-Week Gardening, Nutrition, and Cooking Randomized Control Trial Improves Determinants of Dietary Behaviors | Davis et al., 2016 [15], Los Angeles, USA, Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | Randomized control trial; control group | n = 304 (3rd–5th grade) | LA Sprouts designed and built gardens for the schools; classes taught after school for 90 min once a week including 45-min cooking/nutrition and gardening instructions lessons | 12 weeks | Identification of vegetables/fruit Nutrition and gardening knowledge Increased gardening at home Vegetable/fruit preference Self-efficacy to garden Self-efficacy to cook Self-efficacy to eat fruit/vegetables Willingness to try fruit/vegetables Motivation to cook Motivation to garden Motivation to eat fruit/vegetables | p = 0.001/0.01 p = 0.003 p = 0.003 p = 0.95/0.22 p = 0.61 p = 0.71 p = 0.02 p = 0.28/0.90 p = 0.05 p = 0.04 p = 0.02 | High |
21. Impact of School-Based Vegetable Garden And Physical Activity Coordinated Health Interventions on Weight Status and Weight-Related Behaviors of Ethnically Diverse, Low-Income Students: Study Design and Baseline Data of the Texas, Grow! Eat! Go! (TGEG) Cluster-Randomized Controlled Trial | Evans et al., 2016 [34], Texas, USA, BioMed Central Public Health | Randomized control trial; control group | n = 1326 (3rd grade) | Coordinated Approach to Child Health (CATCH) and Learn, Grow, Eat, Go! (LGEG) program included Junior Master Gardener Health and Nutrition from the Garden and Walk Across Texas (WAT) program aspects to develop garden and physical activity curriculum based on social cognitive theory; students also participated in vegetable recipe demonstrations; 3 separate groups (WAT, LGEG, and WAT + LGEG) | 5 years | LGEG Group (compared to control) Vegetable preference Vegetables exposure WAT Group (compared to control) Vegetable preference Vegetables exposure WAT + LGEG (compared to control) Vegetable preference Vegetables exposure | p = 0.2 p = 0.5 p = 0.2 p = 0.7 p = 0.6 p = 0.3 | High |
22. Evaluation of a Nutrition Intervention through a School-Based Food Garden to Improve Dietary Consumption, Habits and Practices in Children from the Third to Fifth Grade in Chile | Vinueza et al., 2016 [35], Santiago de Chile, Food and Nutrition Sciences | Quasi-experimental; control group | n = 155 (3rd–5th grade) | Used validated methodology created by “Process Mapping: Project Creation and Implementation” project in Brazil to implement garden; educational intervention included 5 workshops to familiarize with gardening, picking vegetables, nutrition education, and a final cooking workshop | 6 months | Intervention Group Motivation to grow F and V at home Motivation to grow F and V in food garden Garden knowledge Taking fruit to school Purchase fruit at school Decrease in disliking cooking Control Group Motivation to grow F and V at home Motivation to grow F and V in food garden Garden knowledge Taking fruit to school Purchase fruit at school Decrease in disliking cooking | p = 0.1967 p = 0.0028 p < 0.0001 p = 0.2733 p < 0.0001 p = 0.0065 p = 0.0158 p = 0.3841 p = 0.0003 p = 0.2888 p = 0.6547 p = 0.2199 | Moderate |
23. LA Sprouts Randomized Controlled Nutrition, Cooking and Gardening Program Reduces Obesity and Metabolic Risk in Hispanic/Latino Youth | Gatto et al., 2017 [36], Los Angeles, USA, Pediatric Obesity | Randomized control trial; control group | n = 319 (3rd–5th grade) | School gardens built on campus and lessons taught for 12 weeks; each class included 45 min of interactive cooking and 45 min of a garden-based activity/lesson; based on Bandura’s “self-efficacy” construct | 12 weeks | Between groups: Fruit intake Vegetable intake | p = 0.56 p = 0.04 | High |
24. A Multicomponent, School-Based Intervention, the Shaping Healthy Choices Program, Improves Nutrition-Related Outcomes | Scherr et al., 2017 [37], California, USA, Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | Randomized control; control group | n = 409 (4th grade) | Shaping Healthy Choices Program (SHCP) aimed at increasing nutrition knowledge and fruit/vegetable consumption and enjoyment; used Discovering Healthy Choices and Cooking Up Healthy Choice curriculum for classroom education and cooking demonstrations | 1 school year | Between groups: Fruit intake Vegetable intake | p = 0.72 p = 0.26 | High |
25. Sowing Seeds for Healthier Diets: Children’s Perspectives on School Gardening | Nury E et al., 2017 [38], Amsterdam, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | Mixed method observational study | n = 45 children | Study in Amsterdam. Program consisted of 25 lessons for 90 min each. Lessons consisted of indoor lessons, gardening outdoors/harvesting, cooking with produce, and indoor lessons on winter plants. | January–December 2015 | Assessed via observation, formal interviews, and conversations. Children enjoyed the school gardening program Outdoor lessons more enjoyable Harvesting was the most enjoyable activity Insufficent gardening time and long expanations were disliked | No p Values | Very Low |
26. School Gardening Increases Knowledge of Primary School Children on Edible Plants and Preferences for Vegetables | Leuven et al., 2018 [39], Utrecht, Netherlands, Food Science and Nutrition | Quasi-experimental; control group | n = 215 (age 10–12) | Included one classroom lesson, 15 outdoor gardening lessons, one harvesting lesson, and one cooking lesson (each 1 h); Implemented first intervention from March–October 2015 and second intervention from March-October 2016 | March 2015–October 2016 (20 months) | Intervention 1 Vegetable preference (beetroot, sugar snaps, green beans, cress, and carrots) Intervention 2 Vegetable preference (potato, onion, tomato, and carrot) No significant effect on attitude towards vegetables or gardening | p = (<0.05, <0.05, <0.05, <0.05, and <0.01) p = (<0.05, <0.05, <0.05, and <0.05) | Moderate |
27. Virtual Sprouts: A Virtual Gardening Pilot Intervention Increases Self-Efficacy to Cook and Eat Fruits and Vegetables in Minority Youth | Bell et al., 2018 [40], California, USA, Games for Health Journal | Quasi-experimental; control group | n = 180 (3rd–5th grade) | Included a virtual game 1 h/week that included special curriculum grounded in the Self Determination Theory and Social Cognitive Theory; game included gardening and cooking activities; in-class lessons included cooking demonstrations; gardening component occurred at home | 3 weeks | Between groups: Self-efficacy to eat F and V Self-efficacy to cook F and V Self-efficacy to garden Vegetable intake Fruit intake Fruit preference Vegetable preference | p = 0.01 p = 0.05 p = 0.36 p = 0.38 p = 0.41 p = 0.09 p = 0.87 | Moderate |
28. Gardening Activities at School and Their Impact on Children’s Knowledge and Attitudes to the Consumption of Garden Vegetables | Kos M and Jerman J, 2019 [41], Slovenia, Problems of Education in the 21st Century | Quasi-experimental; control group | n = 30 (age 6–7) | Worked in school garden by weeding, growing, and gaining knowledge on the produce; consumed produce raw or within recipes such as soups, juices, and salads; activities were based on approaches of experiential and explorative learning | 8 months | No significant attitude difference b/w groups regarding consumption of vegetables Intervention group Attitude towards consumption of Rocket (leafy vegetable), leek, and swede (root vegetable) | p = 0.003, 0.010, and 0.006 | Moderate |
29. Garden-Based Integrate Intervention for Improving Children’s Eating Behavior for Vegetables | Kim S and Park S, 2020 [42], Seoul, South Korea, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health | Experimental design; no control group | n = 202 (3rd and 6th grade) | 12-session integrated intervention program including gardening, nutrition education, and cooking activities based on mediator model for improving children’s eating behavior for vegetables using elements of social cognitive theory; ran by certified researchers from the Korean Horticultural Therapy Association | 12 weeks | 3rd grade: Gardening knowledge Vegetable preference 6th grade: Gardening knowledge Vegetable preference Overall: Gardening knowledge Vegetable preference | p < 0.001 p < 0.001 p < 0.001 p < 0.001 p < 0.001 p < 0.001 | Low |
30. Impact of a Gardening and Physical Activity Intervention in Title 1 Schools: The TGEG Study | Berg et al., 2020 [43], Texas, USA, Childhood Obesity | Randomized control trial; control group | n = 1326 (3rd grade) | LGEG and WAT interventions based on Social cognitive theory (see study 19 for more details) | 6 months | LGEG group: Vegetable preference WAT group: Vegetable preference LGEG + WAT group: Vegetable preference | p < 0.001 p = 0.575 p = 0.001 | High |
31. School-Based Gardening, Cooking and Nutrition Intervention Increased Vegetable Intake but Did Not Reduce BMI: Texas Sprouts—A Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial | Davis J et al., 2021, Texas [44], USA, International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | Randomized controlled cluster trial; control group | n = 3135 (3rd–5th grade) | Used a social ecological-transactional model and lessons were aimed to improve nutrition, cooking, and gardening knowledge/self-efficacy/attitudes as well as children’s willingness to try and their preference for F and V; included 18 one-hour lessons | 1 school year (9 months) | Between groups: Vegetable intake Fruit intake | p = 0.002 p = 0.80 | High |
32. Testing the Effects of Two Field-to-Fork Programs on the Nutritional Outcomes of Elementary School Students from Diverse and Lower-Income Communities | Hartson K et al., 2021 [45], USA, The Journal of School Nursing | Quasi-experimental; no control group | n = 264 | Field-to-Fork Multi-visit Program (after school component excluded due to inclusion criteria of study); included 6 in-class lessons that involved culinary lessons and use of school gardens to learn | 1 academic year | Fruit consumption Vegetable consumption Knowledge of healthy cooking using vegetables | p = 0.138 p = 0.276 p < 0.001 | Low |
33. The Effects of Horticultural Activity Program on Vegetable Preference of Elementary School Students | Kim H et al., 2021 [46], Seoul, South Korea | Quasi-experimental; no control group | n = 136 (3rd and 5th grade) | Conducted weekly 80-min sessions of nutrition education, gardening, or cooking for 12 weeks (usually 20 min for nutrition education, 30 min for gardening/horticultural activity, and 30 min for cooking) | 5 months | Gardening knowledge Vegetable preference Dietary self-efficacy (related to vegetables) | p < 0.001 p < 0.001 p < 0.001 | Low |
34. Impact of a School-based Gardening, Cooking, Nutrition Intervention on Diet Intake and Quality: The TX Sprouts Randomized Controlled Trial | Landry M. et al., 2021 [47], Texas, USA, Nutrients | Randomized controlled trial; control group | n = 3135 (3rd–5th grade) | Cooking With Kids (CWK) included 5, 2 h cooking and/or 5 1 h fruit and vegetable tasting lessons throughout the school year. The study examined the effects of CWK cooking and tasting curriciulum against a tasting only curriciulum. | 1 year | Between groups: Total vegetable intake Total fruit intake | p = 0.003 p = 0.490 | High |
35. Food Environment Intervention Improves Food Knowledge, Wellbeing and Dietary Habits in Primary School Children: Project Daire, A Randomied-Controlled, Factorial Design Cluster Trial | Brennan SF et al., 2021 [48], Ireland, International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | randomized-controlled factorial design cluster trial; control group | n = 903 students (ages 6–7 and 10–11) from 15 different eligible schools | Organized into 4 groups/arms: Nourish, Engage, Control, and a combined Nourish and Engage group. Nourish focused primarily on cooking with locally sourced foods and Engage focused on agriculture and nutrition science. Each group was developed for both 6 to 7 year olds and 10 to 11 year olds. The control group ultimately received the Engage intervention at the end of the study. | 6 months | Total Difficulties Scores (sum of all component scores) improved in all pupils who received Nourish intervention Nourish intervention produced improvements in understanding of food labels Improvements of knowledge of vegetables in season | p ≤ 0.02 p ≤0.01 p = 0.04 | Moderate |
36. Impact of a Farm-to-School Nutrition and Gardening Intervention for Native American Families from the FRESH Study: A Randomized Wait-List Controlled Trial | Taniguchi T. et al., 2022 [49], Osage Nation Regions, USA, Nutrients | Randomized wait-list controlled trial; control group | n = 193 (age 3–6) | Targeted tribally owned Early Childhood Education (ECE) programs and used Food Resource Equity for Sustainable Health; adapted curriculum from Early Sprouts and Watch Me Grow to create a 15-week program involving knowledge, reading, gardening, indoor/outdoor sensory activities, and cooking activities | 6 months | Willingness to try (b/w groups) Tomatoes Carrots Spinach Squash Beans Peppers | p = 0.01 p = 0.50 p = 0.94 p = 0.94 p = 0.049 p = 0.91 | High |
3. Results
3.1. Study Characteristics
3.2. Major Findings
3.2.1. Fruit and Vegetable Intake
3.2.2. Preference for Fruits and Vegetables
3.2.3. Willingness to Try Fruits and Vegetables
3.2.4. Attitudes towards and Self-Efficacy to Consume Fruits and Vegetables
3.2.5. Nutrition, Cooking and/or Gardening Knowledge and Skills
3.2.6. Cooking/Gardening Related Attitudes and Behaviors
4. Discussion
4.1. Comparison of Results for Different Study Characteristics
4.1.1. Length of Intervention
4.1.2. Sample Size
4.1.3. Theory-Based Intervention
4.1.4. Parental Involvement
4.2. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Article | F and V Intake | Preference for F and V | Willingness to Try F and V | Attitudes Towards and/or Self-Efficacy to Consume F and V | Cooking/Gardening Related Behaviors | Cooking and/or Gardening Knowledge/Skills |
Gardening-Only Interventions | ||||||
1 | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
2 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant | Significant |
3 | Significant (unadjusted model) | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
4 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed |
5 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Assessed (positive qualitative evaluation) |
6 | Not assessed | Not significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed |
7 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
8 | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant (self-efficacy) Not significant (attitudes) | Not assessed | Not assessed |
9 | Not significant | Not significant | Not assessed | Not significant | Not assessed | Not assessed |
Total assessed | 3 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
Total Significant | 2 | 1 | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
Article | F and V Intake | Preference for F and V | Willingness to try F and V | Attitudes Towards and/or Self-Efficacy to Consume F and V | Cooking/Gardening Related Behaviors | Cooking and/or Gardening Knowledge/Skills |
Cooking-Only Interventions | ||||||
10 | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed |
11 | Significant (for some vegetables) | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed |
12 | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
13 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant | Significant |
14 | Significant | Significant | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed |
15 | Significant | Significant | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Significant |
16 | Significant | Significant | Not assessed | Significiant | Significant | Not assessed |
17 | Not significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
Total assessed | 6 | 5 | 0 | 3 | 4 | 2 |
Total Significant | 5 | 5 | 0 | 3 | 4 | 2 |
Article | F and V Intake | Preference for F and V | Willingness to try F and V | Attitudes Towards and/or Self-Efficacy to Consume F and V | Cooking/Gardening Related Behaviors | Nutrition, Cooking and/or Gardening Knowledge/Skills |
Cooking and Gardening Combined Interventions | ||||||
18 | Significant (fruit intake in girls) | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
19 | Not assessed | Not significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
20 | Not assessed | Not significant | Not significant | Significant | Significant | Significant |
21 | Not assessed | Not significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
22 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant | Significant |
23 | Significant (vegetables only) | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
24 | Not significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
25 | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not significant | Not assessed |
26 | Not significant | Not significant | Not assessed | Significant | Not significant | Not assessed |
27 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed |
28 | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant |
29 | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
30 | Significant (vegetables only) | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
31 | Not significant | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant |
32 | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Significant | Not assessed | Significant |
33 | Significant (vegetables only) | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
34 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant (beans and tomatoes only) | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed |
35 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Significant |
36 | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Not assessed | Assessed (qualitative results) |
Total assessed | 7 | 8 | 3 | 4 | 4 | 6 |
Total Significant | 4 | 4 | 2 | 4 | 2 | 6 |
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Muzaffar, H.; Guenther, E.; Bosse, O.; Nii-Aponsah, H. Effectiveness of Gardening-Only, Cooking-Only and Combined Cooking and Gardening Programs in Elementary Schools to Improve Fruit and Vegetable Intake: A Systematic Review. Nutrients 2023, 15, 3008. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15133008
Muzaffar H, Guenther E, Bosse O, Nii-Aponsah H. Effectiveness of Gardening-Only, Cooking-Only and Combined Cooking and Gardening Programs in Elementary Schools to Improve Fruit and Vegetable Intake: A Systematic Review. Nutrients. 2023; 15(13):3008. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15133008
Chicago/Turabian StyleMuzaffar, Henna, Eve Guenther, Olivia Bosse, and Harold Nii-Aponsah. 2023. "Effectiveness of Gardening-Only, Cooking-Only and Combined Cooking and Gardening Programs in Elementary Schools to Improve Fruit and Vegetable Intake: A Systematic Review" Nutrients 15, no. 13: 3008. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15133008
APA StyleMuzaffar, H., Guenther, E., Bosse, O., & Nii-Aponsah, H. (2023). Effectiveness of Gardening-Only, Cooking-Only and Combined Cooking and Gardening Programs in Elementary Schools to Improve Fruit and Vegetable Intake: A Systematic Review. Nutrients, 15(13), 3008. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15133008