Background
Teacher self-efficacy can positively impact student dietary
behaviors; however, limited curricular resources and professional
development can serve as barriers to the provision of nutrition education in
the classroom. The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of a
food-based, integrative science curriculum on 4th grade teachers’
self-efficacy toward teaching nutrition.
Methods
Researchers used a quasi-experimental design to implement the
FoodMASTER Intermediate (FMI) curriculum in 19 4th-grade classrooms across
Ohio and North Carolina. The Nutrition Teaching Self-Efficacy Scale was used
to assess baseline and post-test teacher self-efficacy using a 4-point
Likert-scale (1=not confident at all; 4=very confident).
ANCOVA and Wilcoxon-Signed Rank Test were used for statistical analysis.
Results
Teachers in the intervention group displayed significantly higher
post-efficacy expectation scores (mean=3.52; sd=0.41) than
comparison group teachers (mean=2.86; sd=0.55). Overall, the
intervention group showed significant improvement in self-efficacy on 15 of
the 18 items.
Discussion
The results suggest providing training and integrative resources to
teachers can significantly improve self-efficacy toward teaching nutrition.
Future research should focus on determining the amount of training needed to
improve the quality of teacher-delivered nutrition education.
Translation to Health Education Practice
Health educators can use the findings to inform the development of
teacher trainings in nutrition and health.
Purpose
This study aims to develop and empirically assess an instrument for measuring nutrition knowledge aligned to the North Carolina (NC) Healthful Living Essential Standards for teaching nutrition. The instrument was critically evaluated and used to assess nutrition knowledge in Eastern NC students.
Design/methodology/approach
Researchers evaluated 250 students in 16, eighth-grade classrooms using a 22-question researcher-developed nutrition knowledge questionnaire. Assessment questions were aligned with NC Healthful Living Essential Standards, which suggest students should be able to: apply tools to plan healthy nutrition, create strategies to improve dietary intake, create plans for lifelong health, and evaluate health information and products. Survey reliability and validity (face) were evaluated prior to study implementation. Descriptive statistics for individual items, total and individual standard scores were analyzed. Instrument efficacy was evaluated using item-difficulty and discrimination indexes.
Findings
The survey displayed appropriate levels of item difficulty with three exceptions: two questions were identified as too difficult, and one as too easy. The majority of items also displayed acceptable (>0.20) or excellent (>0.40) discrimination (17 out of 20). Average total nutrition knowledge score was 11.82-3.26 (53.7 per cent). Within aligned standards, students scored highest in creating plans for lifelong health (79 per cent) and lowest in evaluating health information (37.6 per cent).
Originality/value
Study findings suggest eighth-grade students may only possess half the nutrition knowledge standards expected in the eighth grade. More instrument development is needed to supply researchers with standard means of assessing nutrition knowledge.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.