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By Marian Wright Edelman | SACOBSERVER.COM WIRE SERVICES
(NNPA) - As a
co-founder and the current Creative Director of the Rancho
La Puerta fitness resort and Golden Door spas, Deborah Szekely
has long been known as a pioneer in health and wellness. My
remarkable friend Szekely is now focusing on a new target
audience: our nation’s children. She is adding her extraordinary
mind, energy, and voice to the chorus of those concerned about
America’s child obesity problem.
Together with Dr. David Kessler,
former FDA Commissioner and now Professor of Pediatrics and
Epidemiology and Biostatistics at the School of Medicine,
University of California, San Francisco, she is promoting
a pilot program they hope will help educate schoolchildren
on the importance of healthy lifestyles.
It’s called the Living Skills
Fifth Grade Semester. Szekely explains it is targeted to fifth
graders because they believe children at that age still adore
their teachers, parents, and friends and are old enough to
understand lessons on healthy choices and to take on tasks
like food preparation, gardening, shopping, and budgeting.
This makes them good candidates to be enthusiastic about learning
how healthy food and exercise will make their bodies work
best and makes them likely to be excited to share what they
are learning at school with their families at home. As Szekely
says, “We believe these children will become proselytizers
to their family, much as past generations did when confronting
their parents about smoking.”
How would this semester-long intervention
work? Deborah Szekely and Dr. Kessler envision the program
this way: “What if fifth-grade American children receive
an entire semester in which all classes in math, science,
geography, language, history and the environment integrated
existing fifth-grade educational requirements with studies
of how the body functions; its nutritional and physical needs,
and proper sources and preparation of healthy, fresh, nutritious
foods?”
They point out proven programs
that are already being funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture
through land-grant universities and colleges that could serve
as models. These include a program at Rutgers University in
New Jersey that offers children the chance to work on a farm;
a University of Massachusetts program called Strength and
Power in Nutrition (SPIN) that is tailored to low-income,
culturally diverse adolescents; and a Louisiana State University
Agriculture Center program that brings a traveling exhibit
on the importance of healthy eating and exercise to schools
across the state. The Living Skills Fifth Grade Semester would
build on successful ideas like these and bring similar kinds
of lessons right into the classroom.
In the sample curriculum, assignments
might include learning about the different tactics advertisers
use to try to influence people’s food choices; creating
recipes for healthy holiday gifts; studying how different
Native American cultures used the land; learning about the
different parts of the digestive system; planning and planting
a class garden; researching heart-healthy activities and foods
while celebrating Valentine’s Day; designing a nutritious
“child friendly” restaurant menu; studying how
the immune system works; calculating how much energy it would
take to burn off the calories in favorite snack foods; and
developing a sample family food budget. The program would
have goals of teaching children how their bodies work, the
causes of disease, and the importance of prevention—the
“living skills” needed “for a long, healthy,
and happy life.”
At a time when more and more experts
are sounding the alarm about the threat rising child obesity
levels pose to our nation’s future health and productivity,
parents, schools, communities, and experts all have a role
to play in finding solutions to this crisis. But the Living
Skills Fifth Grade Semester is another crucial proposal to
add to the list. As Deborah Szekely and Dr. Kessler say: “What
if we don’t let our children lead the way to their —
and our — healthier lives? Then, as current trends continue,
an appalling 86% of Americans could be overweight within two
decades. Obesity-related medical bills will amount to almost
$1 trillion. The solution is prevention via education, and
it must start now.”
I hope our leaders and citizens
will hear and heed them.
Marian Wright Edelman is President of the Children's
Defense Fund whose Leave No Child Behind® mission is to
ensure every child a Healthy Start, a Head Start, a Fair Start,
a Safe Start and a Moral Start in life and successful passage
to adulthood with the help of caring families and communities.
For more information go to www.childrensdefense.org. |