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School Health Index Facilitation Training

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Title: School Health Index Facilitation Training


1
WELCOME
2
MAFHK GOALS
  • Ensure that healthy snacks and foods are provided
    in vending machines, school stores and other
    venues within the schools control.
  • Provide all children, from pre-kindergarten
    through grade 12, with quality daily physical
    education that helps develop the knowledge,
    attitudes, skills, behaviors and confidence
    needed to be physically active for life.

3
Housekeeping
  • Restrooms
  • Phones, Phone Calls-on site number
  • Cell Phones to vibrate
  • Parking Lot
  • Name Tag

4
Agenda
  • Todays Purpose Facilitation
  • Introductions
  • State of the State
  • Healthy Weight Paper
  • Coordinated School Health Team
  • School Health Policies
  • Healthy School Action Tool (HSAT)
  • HSAT Online
  • HSAT Success and Results
  • Resources

5
State of the State
6
  • Alarming Unhealthy Weight Trends
  • (Obese at or above 95th percentile BMI for age)

Ogden C, Flegal K, Carroll M, Johnson C.
Prevalence and Trends in Overweight Among U.S.
Children and Adolescents, 1999-20000. Journal
of the American Medical Association 2002 Vol.
288, no.14, pp.1728-1732
7
Consequences of childhood obesity
  • Physical Health
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Cardiovascular disease risks
  • Orthopedic problems

Institute of Medicine of the National Academies,
Preventing Childhood Obesity Health in the
Balance. 2005 Fact Sheet. Preventing Childhood
Obesity Facts and Figures (http//www.iom.edu/vi
ew.asp?id22606)
8
Consequences of childhood obesity
  • Emotional Health
  • Low self-esteem
  • Negative body image
  • Depression

Institute of Medicine of the National Academies,
Preventing Childhood Obesity Health in the
Balance. 2005 Fact Sheet. Preventing Childhood
Obesity Facts and Figures (http//www.iom.edu/vi
ew.asp?id22606)
9
Consequences of childhood obesity
  • Social Health
  • Stigma
  • Negative stereotyping
  • Discrimination
  • Teasing and bullying
  • Social marginalization
  • Institute of Medicine of the National Academies,
    Preventing Childhood Obesity Health in the
    Balance. 2005 Fact Sheet. Preventing Childhood
    Obesity Facts and Figures (http//www.iom.edu/vi
    ew.asp?id22606)

10
Nutrition-Related Causesof Overweight and Obesity
  • Snack calories are increasing
  • Kids who drink soft drinks consume more calories
    than kids who dont drink soft drinks
  • Only 1 in 5 Michigan high school students ate 5
    servings of fruits/veggies per day
  • Only 1 in 6 Michigan high school students drank
    3 glasses of milk daily (females less likely than
    males)

11
Physical Activity-Related Causesof Overweight
and Obesity
  • 62 of kids 9-13 dont participate in organized
    physical activity during non-school hours
  • 23 of kids 9-13 dont engage in any free time
    physical activity
  • Daily participation in physical education class
    dropped from 42 in 1991 to 25 in 1995MI YRBS
    2001
  • Screen time is increasing

Institute of Medicine of the National Academies,
Preventing Childhood Obesity Health in the
Balance. 2005 Fact Sheet. Preventing Childhood
Obesity The Role of Industry http//www.iom.edu/
report.asp?id22596
12
Parents and TeachersSupport School Policies
  • More than 90 want healthy food in school vending
    machines
  • 80 support daily physical education
  • (Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, December
    2003)

13
Research Shows That...
  • Increased physical, social and emotional
    well-being can improve academic performance.
    Health Academics Making the Link
    Massachusetts Department of Education, 2000
  • In three out of four reading and math tests, Fast
    Break to Learning schools improved academic
    achievement more than the control group of
    schools. University of Minnesota Research Results

14
School Based Breakfast Lunch Programs
showed...
  • Increased School Attendance
  • 8 decline in tardiness
  • Greater Class Participation
  • 73 of staff surveyed in the first-year MMFA
    schools reported an improvement in student
    attentiveness following the start of the program.
  • Improved Emotional Behaviors
  • Suspensions were down from an average of 4.4 days
    per month to 2.8per month
  • Increased Academic Achievement
  • MMFA schools saw a five-point increase in
    students who scored at or above the satisfactory
    level.
  • Maryland State Department of Education , School
    and Community Nutrition Programs, Maryland Meals
    for Achievement (MMFA)

15
School Based Physical Activity Programs
  • Increased concentration
  • Improved Mathematics, Reading Writing Scores
  • Reduced Disruptive Behaviors
  • Maintenance of Positive Interpersonal
    Relationships
  • Reduced Anxiety, Depression Fatigue
  • Bridging Student Health Risks and Academic
    Achievement Through Comprehensive School Health
    Programs Journal of School Health, August 1997

16
Discussion Time
17
Statewide Response to this Crisis

The Role of Michigan Schools In Promoting Healthy
Weight
Healthy Weight Paper
18
Healthy Weight Paper Philosophy
  • Goal Healthy students of all shapes and sizes
  • The primary role of schools is prevention.
  • Schools should go beyond prevention only if
    safeguards are in place.

19
The Healthy Weight Concept Model
Respect for Self
Healthy Students of All Shapes
Sizes
Healthy Eating
Physical Activity
Respect for Others
20
Three problems for MI students
  • Excessive Weight and Weight Gain
  • Social Pressure for Excessive Slenderness
    Weight Discrimination
  • Unsafe Weight Loss Practices

21
Six Building/District LevelGoals
  • Create a Safe and Supportive Learning Environment
  • Create an Environment Where Students Can Be
    Physical Activity
  • Create a Healthy Nutrition Environment

22
Six Building/District LevelGoals
  • Increase Student Participation in Physical
    Education
  • Strengthen Nutrition Education
  • Work With Families to Promote Physical Activity
    Healthy Eating

23
Recommended Steps to Meet Goals
  • Create a Coordinated School Health Team (CSHT)
  • Conduct an assessment Michigans Healthy School
    Action Tool (HSAT)
  • Develop Action Plan Policy and Environment
    changes

24
What Is aCoordinated School Health Team How It
Can Help
25
Coordinated School Health Teams (CSHT)
26
Components of CSHTs
  • Family and Community Involvement
  • Comprehensive School Health Education
  • Physical Education
  • School Health Services

27
Components of CSHTs
  • Counseling, Psychological, Social Services
  • School Nutrition Services
  • Healthy School Environment
  • School-site Health Promotion for Staff

28
Coordinated School Health Teams
29
Coordinated School Health TeamsCan Lead To
  • Students being better nourished
  • Students who eat Breakfast
  • Are better prepared for learning activities
  • Improve academic achievement attention span
  • Decrease tardiness absences
  • Are less likely to overeat or binge eat

30
Coordinated School Health Teams Goals
  • Provide infrastructure for planning
  • Advise on all aspects of school health
  • Deliver consistent messages
  • Give recommendations on policies and improvements

31
Coordinated School Health Teams Goals
  • Engage students, parents, families, staff and
    communities
  • Utilize Fit, Healthy and Ready to Learn
  • Improve the learning environment and student
    achievement
  • Bring about more positive student behaviors

32
Why Coordinate?
  • Addressing students well-being and ability to
    learn in a less fragmented way, schools and
    communities can avoid gaps, collaborate on
    overlapping functions, and eliminate unnecessary
    duplication of efforts. (Allensworth, 1995)

33
SETTING THE STAGEFOR A HEALTHYSCHOOLENVIRONMEN
T
34
Policies
  • One step toward a
  • healthy school environment

35
  • A healthy school environment depends on
    policies. Schools that want to minimize hazards
    and distractions to teaching and learning, create
    a climate in which students and school staff can
    do their best work, and expect that all students
    can succeed will ensure that the necessary
    policies are in place. (Health Is Academic)

36
Smoking
Lessons Learned Smoking rates began to decline
when public health professionals realized the
impact of policy and environmental changes.
Broadcast advertising ban Clean Indoor Air
Act Increase in cigarette taxes

37
NEW MICHIGAN STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION POLICIES
  • Making Environmental Change Easy
  • Coordinated School Health Programs To Support
    Academic Achievement and Healthy Schools
  • www.michigan.gov/documents/CSHP_Policy_77375_7.pdf

38
NEW MICHIGAN STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION POLICIES
  • Making Environmental Change Easy
  • Policy on Quality Physical Education
  • www.michigan.gov/documents/HealthPolicyPE_77380_7.
    pdf
  • Policy on Offering Healthy Food and Beverages In
    Venues Outside of the Federally Regulated Child
    Nutrition Programs
  • www.michigan.gov/documents/Healthy_Foods_AttchmtA_
    7.pdf

39
Impact of Policies
  • Events
  • One time
  • Unique
  • Individual
  • Short-term
  • Non-sustaining
  • Environment
  • On-going
  • Repeated
  • Policy-level
  • Long-term
  • Sustaining

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42
TEAM BUILDING EXERCISE
  • The Dragon Activity

43
CHARACTERISTICS OF TEAMS
  • Team Members
  • Have shared goals or a reason for working
    together.
  • Are interdependent. (Perceive they need one
    anothers experience, abilities, and commitment.)
  • Are committed to the idea that working together
    leads to more effective decisions than working in
    isolation.
  • Are accountable as a functioning unit within a
    larger organizational contest. (Report regularly
    to a higher authority i.e. principal,
    superintendent, etc.)

44
WHAT IS FACILITATION?
  • Provides leadership without taking the reins
  • Gets others to assume responsibility and take the
    lead
  • Helps team stay on task
  • Ensures that everyone is being heard

45
WHAT IS FACILITATION?
  • Stays out of the discussion to focus on how the
    meeting is being run
  • Encourages others to reach their own conclusion
  • Stays neutral
  • Keeps the meeting moving and on schedule

46
Coordinated School Health Teams
District CSH Council Formed
Directs and advises School Board and
Superintendent
Directs, advises, and responds to building level
CSHTs
Completes Healthy School Report Card Action
Plan (Available 2006)
Building Level District Level Infrastructure
Funding/ Operational Changes
Building Level CSHT selects assessment tool to
start
Building Level CSHT selects assessment tool to
start
Building Level CSHT selects assessment tool to
start
School Building Surveys
Risk/protector factor survey
Quality Leadership
Asset surveys
SHEP
HSAT
School Climate Surveys
Substance abuse and violence survey
Effective Instruction
YRBS
SCASS
Building Level Survey Results
47
Mtg 1
48
Steps to Completing HSAT
  • Form a coordinated school health team (CSHT)
  • Visit
  • www.mihealthtools.org/schools
  • Download PDF files
  • Put HSAT document together
  • Complete HSAT
  • Implement Action Plan
  • Complete HSAT 2 and HSAT 3

49
Options After Completing HSAT
  • Schedule next meeting dates
  • Monthly (?) Meetings
  • Communication methods ?
  • HSAT 2 date?
  • HSAT 3 date?
  • Record questions about your experience and report
    out to large group when finished.
  • Share with school board, PTA, staff . . .

50
Options After Completing HSAT
  • A schools action plan will be online for two
    years and be accessible to the school during that
    time.
  • The action plan can be updated, revised, and
    changed as a coordinating health team wishes to
    change it for the school.

51
HSATRole Play Mtg 1
52
HSAT Mtg 1
  • Form a CSHT
  • (5-10 people per group)
  • Discuss if any new members need to be recruited
    before Meeting 2
  • Review CSH model

53
HSAT Mtg 1
  • Need aN on-site coordinator
  • Tell the group their expectations for the year
    and the next HSAT meeting.
  • Set the length of time for the team future
    meetings
  • Meeting 2 ( may be 6 hours)
  • Regular scheduled CSHT meetings (monthly meetings)

54
HSAT Mtg 1
  • Homework
  • Distribute/Reveiw The Role of Promoting Healthy
    Weight in Michigan Schools
  • Distribute modules
  • Assign a lead to each module
  • Discuss completing entire HSAT or ?
  • Decide how/when the data will be entered online
  • Schedule next HSAT meeting

55
www.mihealthtools.org/schools
Web Based Tool
56
  • One tool for all schools
  • Team driven
  • Determine strengths
  • Determine weaknesses
  • Develop action plan

57
Homework
  • Distribute/Reveiw The Role of Promoting Healthy
    Weight in Michigan Schools
  • Distribute modules 1, 7, 8
  • Assign a lead to each module

58
HSAT Role Play Mtg 2
59
Role Play Mtg 2Instructions
  • Identify on-site coordinator and/or facilitator,
    Time keeper, Note taker
  • Introduce CSHT members
  • Sell the purpose of completing HSAT today

60
Role Play Mtg 2Instructions
  • Complete HSAT modules 5-8 using the paper version
  • Answer questions in modules
  • come to consensus for each question
  • Answer score cards for each module
  • 5. Write strengths and recommended actions on
    flip chart

61
Role Play Mtg 2Instructions
  • 6. Once modules 5-8 are complete, transfer group
    recommended action steps onto the Action Plan
  • Rate Action Steps as either High or Low priority
  • 8. Complete Action Plan
  • Write steps needed to complete a recommended
    action steps for all HIGH priority action steps
  • Complete name and expected due date

62
HSAT Online
63
www.mihealthtools.org/schools
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68
Assemble downloaded documents
  • To create a complete HSAT you will need to
    assemble the downloaded documents.
  • Ready
  • Set
  • Assemble!

69
8 HSAT Modules
  • 1. School Health Policies and Environment
  • 2. Health Education
  • 3. Physical Education Other Physical Activity
    Programs
  • 4. Nutrition Services
  • 5. School Health Services
  • 6. School Counseling, Psychological and Social
    Services
  • 7. Health Promotion for Staff
  • 8. Family and Community Involvement

70
Register online
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Tips to remember when registering
  • Each school building needs a unique email and
    password.
  • Note
  • If you manage more than one building HSAT you
    will require you to provide a unique email for
    each school.
  • The username for each building can be the same.

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Click Here to get to Module 1-8 Specific
Score Cards
80
Score Cards M1-8
  • Score cards for each module
  • Highlight school strengths
  • Capture teams recommended actions

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Steps Before Completing Action Plan
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Results Successes
96
2000-01
  • SHI (4 schools)
  • Cass City
  • Mayville
  • Birch Run
  • St. Louis

97
2002-03
Changing The Scene (12 schools) SHI (20
schools)
98
2003-04
  • SHI (35 schools)
  • 6 continuation

99
2004-05
  • 44 HSAT schools
  • 35 continuation ?

100
Most Significant Changes 03-04
  • All schools developed a coordinated school health
    team,
  • Two schools implemented a policy to make their
    school tobacco free 24 hours a day 7 days a week,
  • One school altered their physical education
    credit policy to eliminate alternative
    recreations, such as band or other sports
    activities, to meet their physical education
    requirement. All students must take physical
    education classes to meet the schools
    requirements,

101
Most Significant Changes 03-04
  • Schools purchased equipment and resources to
    enhance physical activity during recess time,
  • Schools increased the opportunities for physical
    activity with students and staff,
  • Healthy food options were added to the cafeteria
    offerings, vending machines and school
    activities,
  • One school implemented nutrition lessons in K-5
    classes.

102
Most Significant Changes 03-04
  • Participating in the international day of All
    Children Exercise Simultaneously in May 2004,
  • Participating in the international day of Walk
    Your Child to School Day in October 2003,
  • Incorporating healthy meals and snacks for staff
    events,
  • Enrolling in Team Nutrition

103
Most Significant Changes 03-04
  • Promoting physical activity opportunities
    throughout the community, such as aerobic or
    swimming opportunities,
  • Educating staff, families and students on healthy
    eating, physical activity and tobacco-free
    lifestyles,
  • Incorporating the opportunity for students to
    wash their hands,
  • Changing food options to be healthier in the
    cafeteria and vending machines,
  • Obtaining student input for programs, activities,
    and classes,
  • Providing non-food items as rewards.

104
In a Nutshell
  • Questions?
  • Who can summarizehow HSAT is completed?
  • Any foreseen problems completing HSAT?

105
Next Steps
  • Next Steps

106
Next Steps
  • Set up meeting in your target schools?
  • Think of on site coordinators to approach whos
    ready?
  • Take on only one building!
  • Begin networking
  • Stay in touch
  • Talk to them
  • Support them

107
Benefits of Today
  • Network of professionals working on healthy
    school environments
  • Knowledge of HSAT and Healthy Weight Paper
  • Facilitation Team Building Skills
  • New resources
  • You can be an HSAT advocate to improve schools
    health policies and environments.

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Frequently Asked Questions
  • Why should our school complete the HSAT? What are
    the benefits?
  • Who is eligible to complete the HSAT?
  • What type of school is the HSAT designed for?
  • Our school is small and does not have many of the
    amenities that larger schools do. Is it still
    worth it for us to complete the HSAT?
  • What is the rationale for including the
    particular modules and questions in the HSAT?
  • Who should be involved in completing the HSAT?
  • How do we get started? What is the best way to go
    about completing the HSAT?
  • Can more than one person work on the HSAT at one
    time?

110
Resources
  • The Role of Michigan Schools in Promoting Healthy
    Weight http//www.emc.cmich.edu
  • Fit Healthy and Ready to Learn
  • Health is Academic
  • Super Size Me, available on DVD at most local
    video stores.

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112
Resources
  • Fit Healthy and Ready to Learn
  • Health is Academic
  • http//www.mihealthtools.org Healthy Schools
    Action Tool (HSAT), School Resources, Community
    Resources
  • http//www.udim.org United Dairy Industry of
    Michigan nutrition education resources
  • http//www.emc.cmich.edu MI Model Coordinators,
    Healthy Weight Paper, Healthy Kids Healthy Weight
    resource for families.
  • http//www.michiganfitness.org Walk to School
    Day, EPEC, physical activity resources

113
Resources
  • http//www.cdc.gov school health index,
    obesity, coordinated school health programs,
    school health resources . . .
  • http//www.tn.fcs.msue.msu.edu Michigan Team
    Nutrition, grant opportunities
  • http//www.fns.usda.gov/tn Team Nutrition,
    USDAs Changing The Scene kit
  • www.actionforhealthykids.org Michigan Action
    For Healthy Kids

114
Resources
  • Pat Cooper, Superintendent of McComb, MISS
  • http//www.aasa.org/publications/sa/2003_01/Cooper
    _ninefacets.htm

115
MAFHK GOALS
  • Ensure that healthy snacks and foods are provided
    in vending machines, school stores and other
    venues within the schools control.
  • Provide all children, from pre-kindergarten
    through grade 12, with quality daily physical
    education that helps develop the knowledge,
    attitudes, skills, behaviors and confidence
    needed to be physically active for life.

116
TODAYS PRESENTERS
  • Donna Hensey, United Dairy Industry of Michigan,
    dhensey_at_udim.org
  • Nick Drzal, Michigan Department of Education,
    drzaln_at_michigan.gov

117
  • Break
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