Dear Parents,
September is National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month. Obesity in children has more than doubled and quadrupled in adolescents in the last 30 years. In 2012, more than one in three children and adolescents were overweight or obese. Obesity has immediate and long-term effects on health AND well-being. One immediate effect for kids is being the recipient of bullying by their peers at school, especially if they are in middle school. When kids get bullied at school, they isolate themselves at home and at school. They stop participating in after-school activities. They complain about stomach aches more often than kids who are not overweight or obese and have higher rates of absenteeism. Then their grades start dropping. Then their self-esteem is affected.
Driving to work every day, I pass a middle school and an elementary school. I always notice the kids who walk to school because growing up, I walked to school. I see many kids struggling to walk, walking slower than other kids who are not overweight. I see kids wearing long pants and long sleeve shirts because they are trying to cover up their size, even though it is 90 degrees outside and other kids are wearing shorts and T-shirts to school. I notice that the overweight and obese kids are walking slower than the rest of their classmates. How can you not notice a child who is twice the size of other kids?
What bothers me about my goal of raising awareness about the solutions to childhood obesity is that kids who are overweight or obese need better role models. Take today, for example. I happened to be at the local hospital and I observed that most of the health care workers were overweight or obese. Outside the hospital, I observed health care workers smoking (instead of walking) on their break. In the hospital cafeteria, I saw lots of highly processed, prepackaged foods, iceberg lettuce on the salad bar (yuck!) and a large display of sodas right by the cash register. If most adults are eating foods high in added sugars and think nothing of drinking 3 sodas a day, then is it any wonder we have an obesity epidemic in this country?
If childhood obesity is such a big problem, then do we really care enough to do something about it? If the health care workers at my local hospital are any indication, then I would say no. If the number of overweight and obese teachers is an indication, then I would say no.
I could go on and on, but you catch my drift. If childhood obesity is such a big problem, then WE MUST BE THE SOLUTION. It is up to us to lead by example. It is up to us to teach kids how to read food labels and be nutrition detectives. But if we are drinking three sodas a day and taking our work breaks to smoke instead of take a 10 minute walk, then what are we really teaching our children about good health habits?
September is National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month. Drink water, not soda. Choose fruit instead of fruit juice. Read food labels and don't buy food containing trans fats. Take a walk. Make one change a week. Be a better role model. Choose to lead by example. Dare to care. Be the solution.
NEXT WEEK: Lessons from a box of Pop Tarts
In gratitude,
Nancy Heinrich
Founder, Growing Healthy Kids, Inc.
PS-If your kids are age 13 and younger, then look for the details about our 4th Annual Poster Contest on the September 3rd issue of Wellness Wednesdays. We are SO EXCITED about tapping the voice of America's children!
Showing posts with label poster contest for kids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poster contest for kids. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 24, 2014
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
WELLNESS WEDNESDAYS: Poster Contest for Kids 2014
"Every child is an artist: The problem is how to remain an artist once he grows up."
-- Pablo Picasso
September is National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month. This is why we have chosen this month to announce our national 4th Annual Poster Contest for Growing Healthy Kids. This year's theme is �My Favorite Family Foods�. Our goal is to encourage kids to express their visions about healthy foods. Parents, please use this theme to talk with your children about family food traditions, preparing favorite recipes as a family, or favorite foods to grow at home.
Guidelines for the 4th Annual Poster Contest for Growing Healthy Kids are below:
- � The poster contest is open to all children in the U.S. who are 13 years old and younger on October 16, 2014.
- � Artwork must be no larger than 8-1/2� x 11�. All media are accepted. Chalk, charcoal and pastel entries should be sealed with a fixative spray to prevent smearing. Combinations of media (crayons, colored pencils, chalk, pen, torn pieces of paper, pictures from magazines, markers, etc.) are acceptable.
- � Only one entry per child.
- � On back of the poster please include:
o Parent�s name, email, phone number, and address
o Child�s name, age, and school name
Deadline: Posters must be received or postmarked by October 16, 2014.
Mail posters to: Growing Healthy Kids, 762 S. US Hwy 1, #106, Vero Beach, FL. 32962. Winners will be notified by November 16, 2014.
Each poster is judged on originality, artistic merit, and expression of the theme. Participants agree to allow Growing Healthy Kids, Inc. to use their names and posters for educational, promotional, and publicity purposes. Three posters will be selected by a panel of educators and artists and will be published on the Growing Healthy Kids website and in the next Growing Healthy Kids� book about good food and health. When posters are published, only the child�s first initial, last name, city and state will be included. No other information will be published or shared. Certificates of Recognition will be sent to the three children whose posters are selected, along with a signed copy of NOURISH AND FLOURISH: Kid-Tested and Approved Tips and Recipes to Prevent Diabetes. All entries become property of Growing Healthy Kids, Inc.
| A mother and daughter at a Growing Healthy Kids program held at Gifford Youth Activity Center in Vero Beach, Florida. |
We have a generation of kids at risk for obesity-related diseases. The board of directors and volunteers who are part of the Growing Healthy Kids movement feel strongly about unleashing the power of the youth voice to improve the health � and lives � of America�s children and their families to reverse, prevent and halt childhood obesity and obesity-related diseases. We can learn from our children. They can learn from us. Kids are very observant about their world. There are teachable moments all around us.
Studies have shown that having dinner together as a family is one of the most important ways you can teach your children how to stay at a healthy weight. Planning meals together, shopping together, cooking together, taking care of a kitchen herb garden, and enjoying food together as a family�these tasks are about so much more than food! So enjoy talking about this year�s theme and start creating some family food traditions of your own. Most of all, have fun!
In gratitude,
Nancy Heinrich
Founder, Growing Healthy Kids, Inc. Tuesday, May 8, 2012
POSTER CONTEST FOR KIDS UNLEASHES THEIR VOICES
Dear America,
We want to hear from kids about how everyone can eat healthier foods at home, at school, and at work. We believe that input from kids is key to solving the childhood obesity epidemic in America. We need to hear kids' voices...their ideas for teaching adults...their ideas for teaching kids about eating real foods and avoiding foods that are bad for us. We want to provide a platform for their thoughts about what healthy eating means to them and what they need to make it happen for themselves and their friends.
We want to hear from kids about how everyone can eat healthier foods at home, at school, and at work. We believe that input from kids is key to solving the childhood obesity epidemic in America. We need to hear kids' voices...their ideas for teaching adults...their ideas for teaching kids about eating real foods and avoiding foods that are bad for us. We want to provide a platform for their thoughts about what healthy eating means to them and what they need to make it happen for themselves and their friends.
We need some big solutions to solve a big problem. Kids were never meant to be shopping in �plus size� stores and wearing XXXL sizes. Kids are not supposed to be struggling to walk to school. Kids are not supposed to be out of breath after 5 minutes in their once a week physical education class. Kids are not supposed to be eating meals at school filled with white sugar and white flour.
Now we need your help to get the word out to parents and kids. Growing Healthy Kids has unleashed its 2012 Poster Contest to unleash the voice of America�s youth. With the theme of �The Art of Healthy Eating for Growing Healthy Kids�, kids ages 5 to 25 are invited to create their impression of the theme on an 8-1/2 x 11 inch piece of white paper. The only rule in this poster contest is that these 9 words (The Art of Healthy Eating for Growing Healthy Kids) must appear on the poster, either as the title or somewhere on the poster. Anything goes: pencil, watercolor, mosaics, murals, pen, chalk, paint, photographs, etc.
What does "The Art of Healthy Eating for Growing Healthy Kids" look like to you? We are excited to find out!
What does "The Art of Healthy Eating for Growing Healthy Kids" look like to you? We are excited to find out!
On the back of the poster include: parent name, phone, and email (if available), child�s name, age, school name, city and state. Mail poster to: Growing Healthy Kids Variety Store, 3300 43rd Avenue, #4, Vero Beach, FL. 32960 by May 25, 2012. All entries become property of Growing Healthy Kids, Inc. Winners will be notified by June 30, 2012.
Over the past 2 weeks The Art of Healthy Eating for Growing Healthy Kids poster contest was launched in collaboration with Boys & Girls Clubs of Indian River County. The children at the Fellsmere, Sebastian, and Vero Beach clubs were inspired with a challenge from Nancy Heinrich, founder of the Growing Healthy Kids movement. The challenge was to create centerpieces for a dinner table using fresh fruits, vegetables, and dried beans. This challenge was to motivate them to make healthy eating a central part of the family dinner table by giving it a real focal point. It also reinforced recent research findings that when children sit down and eat dinner with their families, they maintain healthier weights.
| Photo taken at Sebastian Boys & Girls Clubs of Indian River County, Florida at poster contest launch. |
Let�s use the power of America�s youth and commit to be fit. Growing Healthy Kids is committed to halting, reversing, and preventing obesity and obesity-related diseases such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, and bone and joint disorders. We are a non-profit organization based in Vero Beach, Florida providing leadership to solve public health problems.
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