2004 Essay Contest:
Why Schools Should Serve Locally-Grown Foods
2nd Place — Erin Shores 12th Grade/Kiowa, OK
From Farm to School
Picture this: You walk into a room and smell the aroma of over-baked
rolls, fresh fruit and vegetables, and freshly cooked meat. All
give off such a wonderful aroma that your stomach growls and your
mouth begins to water. The last place you would expect to smell
this food is in a school cafeteria. Unfortunately, school lunches
have deteriorated over the years. Instead of homemade food, today’s
school students are served food that has been frozen, prepackaged,
or canned. Farm-to-school programs could help change this problem
in Oklahoma. In fact, these programs are beneficial for several
reasons: they help improve children’s health, they educate
students, and they are helpful to local farmers. These reasons
have been proven true because of the success of farm-to-school
programs in other states.
Let’s face it. The food served in today’s school
cafeterias is not the best. The prepackaged frozen food that the
youth eat in Oklahoma schools may give them the required servings
of the basic food groups, but rarely is this food healthy. Most
of the food served is fried or has grease dripping from it. The
fruits and vegetables served to students come from cans, are usually
flavorless, and appear to have been "dead"
for quite sometime. Most students will not eat what they call "the
gross, unrecognizable cafeteria food" and will instead spend
their money in the school’s vending machines. These vending
machines are not filled with healthy, nutritious alternative food;
instead, they are full of name-brand candy and pop. The state of
food in cafeterias and these vending machines may help answer the
question why so many of Oklahoma’s youth are obese. Farm-to-school
programs can help solve obesity. "Clinical nutritionist and
Pennsylvania Extension specialist Lynn James cited studies linking
fresh fruits and vegetables to lower incidences of obesity"
(Sullivan). Farm-to-school programs can help bring fresh fruits
and vegetables to Oklahoma students. Also, students are much more
likely to eat fresh food because its flavor is so much better than
the flavor of the canned and prepackaged food they are served now.
Some people may argue that farm-to-school projects cannot be successful
year round because of the growing seasons in Oklahoma. Some solutions
may be "menus that take into account the seasonality of fruits
and vegetables, and using shelf-stable and minimally processed
produce such as onions and potatoes" (Sullivan).
Farm-to-school programs are also designed to educate today’s
youth.
"Farm-to-school programs typically integrate food services
with instructional school gardens, school recycling programs, farm
visits, and curriculum development to create a holistic, experientially-based
learning environment"
(University of California). These activities would have a major
impact on Oklahoma students. They would also be informed of the
benefits of eating more healthy food and less junk food from the
vending machines. The benefits of these programs are vast; they
set the stage for children’s eating habits as they grow older,
helping to decrease the percentage of obesity in adults over time.
These lessons are definitely worth teaching Oklahoma students,
and would be of great benefit to our state.
In today’s day and time, small farmers are almost extinct
when compared to how many there were fifty years ago. Old McDonald
is no more: Large farms are taking over our land. "In recent
years, small-and medium-sized family farmers have been increasingly
forced out of business due to a declining share of the food dollar" (University
of California). Simply put, there are fewer markets for small farmers
than before. Therefore, farm-to-school programs may help to solve
this problem. These programs give farmers extra income and help
local economies. Farm-to-school programs also teach people and
youth to respect small farmers in their area. Buying local food
may be a little more expensive, but farm-to-school programs help "[education]
future farmer’s market customers. The more a person appreciates
how something tastes, rather than what it coss, these eaters will
be future farmer’s market customers and supporting local
farmers" (Sullivan). Farm-to-school programs will not only
help small farmers now but will also help them in the future.
Farm-to-school programs are not new. The programs have met with
great success in other states. The programs have had success not
only in warm states like California and Florida but also in colder
states like New York. Of course, there are barriers. "School
food service personnel are under tremendous pressure to purchase
the lowest-cost, most convenient food. Many schools no longer have
kitchen facilities" (Healthy Schools). These barriers will
have to be overcome, but the benefits of farm-to-school programs
make overcoming the barriers worth the effort. The long-term benefits
of the programs make the problems that are faced now seem small.
Oklahoma schools should definitely try to put the farm-to-school
programs into action.
Picture this: You walk into a room and smell the aroma of oven-baked
rolls, fresh fruits and vegetables, and freshly cooked meat. Your
stomach begins to growl and your mouth begins to water. The aroma
couldn’t possibly be coming from a school cafeteria, right?
Wrong! Farm-to-school programs could make this fantasy possible.
Remember the benefits: farm-to-school programs help maintain the
health of students, educate students about farming and healthy
living, and help small farmers gain more income and appreciation.
We also know that farm-to-school programs are successful because
of thriving programs conducted in other states. Oklahoma students,
schools, and small farmers would all greatly benefit from farm-to-school
programs. Oklahoma should definitely work to start these programs
in our schools.
Works Cited
Healthy Schools Campaign. "Healthier Schools,
Happier Farmers: Getting Crops to Schools."
2004. Online. Internet. 19 Feb. 2004. Available
http://www.healthyschoolscampaign.org/farm-to-school.htm.
Sullivan, Dan. "Expanding Farm-to-School Programs
Create Opportunities for Farmers...
And Children." THE NEW FARM. 2003. Online. Internet. 19 Feb.
2004. Available http://www.newfarm.org/depts/talking_shop/1203/farm-to-school.shtml.
University of California Sustainable Agriculture
Research and Education Program.
"Farm-to-School Programs." 2002. Online. Internet. 19 Feb. 2004.
Available
http://www.sarep.ucdavis.edu/cdpp/farmtoschool.
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