Role-playing in group discussion Case problems in group discussion Use of radio and television .. Analysis of propaganda .... Animal feeding experiments Preparation of food at school Planning menus for the school lunch Making and using posters Illustrated talks Using problem-solving techniques Using literature effectively \\Tays to work with parents
Why Nutrition Education?was especially affected by the lack of nourishment. By the time these boys and girls had reached maturity, they had stopped growing at a weight-height level 2 years behind their growth possibilities.Spies also studied the reversal of growth failure by adding milk solids to the diet of the children. He paired off children similar in nutritive failure, and gave one member of each pair a supplement of varying amounts of milk solids over increasingly longer periods of time. The more milk the children used, within the limits of his study, the greater the increases in height, weight, physique, and speed of growth as shown on the Wetzel Grid ( 13), when compared with the records of the children not receiving the extra milk. Benefits of the added milk were also evident in the composition of the bones. Spies concluded that the retarding effect of prolonged nutritive failure is reversed promptly if the nutrients in the dietary supplement are supplied in sufficient amounts to overcome the accumulated deficiencies. 0 ,N•N~NG., Blair ( 14) studied the diets of 150 children ranging in