Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Did you know? Philadelphia cream cheese was born in Upstate NY and there’s a whole

    Ian McNulty: New restaurants to try, old favorites to revisit in New Orleans for

    Petit Pomeroy Now Open in River North

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    The Nom Nom News
    • Home
    • Food
    • Recipes of the World
    • Eats
    • Cuisine
    • Desserts
    • Beverages
    • Salad
    • Best Food Cities
      1. New York City
      2. New Orleans
      3. Chicago
      4. San Francisco
      5. Houston
      6. Tucson, Arizona
      7. Cleveland, Ohio
      8. North Carolina
      9. Kentucky
      10. South Carolina
      11. View All

      Did you know? Philadelphia cream cheese was born in Upstate NY and there’s a whole

      September 9, 2024

      NYC nonprofit helps communities fight food insecurity

      September 9, 2024

      The Best Places to Visit in New York City During Fashion Week

      September 9, 2024

      Meet the Hudson Valley Artisans Redefining Upstate New York’s Food and Drink Scene

      September 8, 2024

      Ian McNulty: New restaurants to try, old favorites to revisit in New Orleans for

      September 9, 2024

      The tastiest restaurants in the French Quarter

      September 8, 2024

      Midway to Mardi Gras, the slow time for NOLA bakeries is a great time for football food

      September 8, 2024

      Cristina Quackenbush’s Tatlo combines Filipino soul food and absinthe

      September 7, 2024

      Petit Pomeroy Now Open in River North

      September 9, 2024

      Chicago’s Garrett Popcorn offers special deal starting Monday for 75th anniversary

      September 9, 2024

      Co-op grocer Chicago Market plans 2025 opening in Uptown

      September 9, 2024

      How To Eat Like A Local Chicago Foodie Without Leaving Home – Tasting Table

      September 8, 2024

      The old restaurant model is broken. So how is the third-generation Original Joe’s still

      September 9, 2024

      Abandoned nursery in East Bay to be transformed into fresh food multiplex

      September 9, 2024

      4 Bay Area Restaurants and Bars That Closed in September

      September 8, 2024

      New Restaurant – Galinette: A Taste of Marseille in a San Francisco – MerciSF

      September 8, 2024

      This Week’s Houston Events at Restaurants & Bars — September 15 Edition – Houston Food

      September 9, 2024

      Openings and Closings: Buttermilk Baby Bounces In, Gold Tooth Tony’s Bellaire

      September 9, 2024

      Houston’s 5 Best Weekend Food Bets: Master the Art of Bourbon at Julep

      September 9, 2024

      Mexichido Bar & Grill now serving food, cocktails in Kingwood

      September 8, 2024

      The best place to eat Mexican food outside Mexico

      September 2, 2024

      Here’s what you can eat at UA football games this fall

      September 2, 2024

      Highest-rated fine dining restaurants in Tucson by diners

      August 31, 2024

      Scorching heat leaves Tucson food trucks hungry for customers

      August 30, 2024

      17 high-energy bars in Northeast Ohio to cheer on the Cleveland Browns this NFL season

      September 9, 2024

      This Week in Cleveland Food News: Paloma at Van Aken District Evolving and More

      September 8, 2024

      The Friars’ Table, Opening This Winter in Playhouse Square, is Inspired by Monastic

      September 7, 2024

      Labor Day events happening across Northeast Ohio

      September 5, 2024

      Word On The Street Is That Chubby Fish Serves The Best Food In South Carolina

      September 9, 2024

      As record heat sweeps the US, some people must choose between food and energy bills

      September 8, 2024

      Food and beverage warehouse company to start first SC operation in N. Charleston

      September 7, 2024

      North Carolina restaurant’s strict dress code — including no leggings — draws comparisons

      September 7, 2024

      9 businesses receive KDA Buy Local lifetime award – The Advocate-Messenger

      September 9, 2024

      Cousins Maine Lobster food truck debuts in Louisville

      September 8, 2024

      Residents excited about KFC reopening in Iron County

      September 8, 2024

      UK faculty roll out local food systems curriculum to inspire Kentucky youth

      September 7, 2024

      Inspired by family, a new ‘Carolina-style’ BBQ restaurant opens in North Augusta

      September 9, 2024

      SC Social Services agents arrest Greenwood Co. woman for SNAP fraud

      September 8, 2024

      Charleston-based chip company bags Clemson and USC deal for football season

      September 8, 2024

      EBT benefits hack impacting vulnerable families in South Carolina

      September 8, 2024

      Did you know? Philadelphia cream cheese was born in Upstate NY and there’s a whole

      September 9, 2024

      Ian McNulty: New restaurants to try, old favorites to revisit in New Orleans for

      September 9, 2024

      Petit Pomeroy Now Open in River North

      September 9, 2024

      The old restaurant model is broken. So how is the third-generation Original Joe’s still

      September 9, 2024
    The Nom Nom News
    You are at:Home»Best Food Cities»UK faculty roll out local food systems curriculum to inspire Kentucky youth
    Best Food Cities

    UK faculty roll out local food systems curriculum to inspire Kentucky youth

    September 7, 2024
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email


    LEXINGTON, Ky. (Sept. 6, 2024) — A collaborative project between the University of Kentucky Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment (CAFE), Black Soil KY and Need More Acres Farm has resulted in an agriculture and food systems curriculum for young Kentuckians.

    The Food, Farming and Community curriculum is an interactive, story-based learning tool that explores local food systems and agriculture career paths for Kentucky youth. Its goal is to encourage students to participate in agriculture and promote food literacy.

    Nicole Breazeale, associate professor in the Department of Community and Leadership Development at Martin-Gatton CAFE, serves as the principal investigator for the project. Breazeale believes that the program will ignite youth’s passions related to the value of inclusive and sustainable local food systems.

    “All youth deserve access to fresh, healthy, local food, and all youth deserve the opportunity to explore careers in growing and producing food,” Breazeale said. “I think this curriculum fills a gap and helps youth around the state get excited about an inclusive local food system, which is critical to the future of our state, our health, our economies and our connection to each other.”

    The curriculum centers around three videos showcasing stories of farmers and local food systems practitioners around the state, including teenagers involved in beekeeping, hydroponics and community supported agriculture.

    Former UK football player and retired NFL player Avery Williamson, who grew up on a farm and is returning to agriculture, introduces the video series. Ashley Smith of Black Soil KY and Michelle Howell of Need More Acres serve as co-hosts.

    “This project has been transformative for land-based storytelling in Kentucky. Our featured guests are at the top of their industry but are oftentimes overlooked and undersought,” Smith said. “The interviews weave together education, empowerment and innovation in reaching a critical audience to the future of agriculture — the youth.”

    Ten interactive lessons have been developed around the video series, which culminate in a social action project.

    Kimberly Haire, a middle school agriculture educator in Bullitt County, is one of seven agriculture educators who piloted this curriculum during the 2023-24 school year. As someone in the midst of introducing more fresh foods into their diet and reducing their intake of processed foods, she knew her students could learn a lot in this space because she was learning alongside them.

    “A lot of students, and adults, don’t know where their food comes from,” Haire said. “One of the things the curriculum did was break down global versus local foods, and I could see kids’ eyes opening. They were so engaged with the content because they know this affects them.”

    For their social action project, Haire’s students worked to address the problem of food insecurity in their community. Since many low-income families lack access to fresh and healthy local produce and minimally processed food, they decided to make local food boxes. They purchased a wide variety of products from local farmers, including lettuce, strawberries, carrots, local tomato sauce and biscuit mix, local meat and other meal ingredients. They put those foods into boxes with recipe notes and cooking implements from UK Cooperative Extension Service and distributed them through their school’s Family Resource Center.

    “The most amazing part of the social action project was watching our community come together to support us,” Haire said. “Need More Acres Farm, Kentucky Farm Bureau and our local extension office are just a few of the groups that donated to help my students. It showed them this project is much bigger than just the classroom.”

    Jocelyn Kemp is a 4-H agent in Hardin County. Unlike in the traditional agriculture classroom, 4-H agents have less time with youth during in-school programming due to class times and limited classroom visits. Because of this, 4-H agents went through and chose which curriculum lessons would be most valuable to 4-H students.

    “What makes 4-H unique is that while it’s statewide, it’s also individualized to your community,” Kemp said. “Our needs in Hardin County are going to look different from needs in other counties.”

    Kemp was invited into a local middle school to teach a handful of lessons over a few months. Although it was not an agriculture class, the students were interested in food and excited to learn about it.

    With the interactive, hands-on lessons and relatable content, Kemp noted how well the students retained the information from one month to the next. This encouraged her to bring in different food samples, teaching lessons about how those foods are made and how many places food travels before it’s put on a plate.

    “The first food lesson was called ‘the path of popcorn,’” Kemp said. “I helped them track the popcorn all the way from when it’s corn in the field to in their hands. It helped them understand, ‘this is convenient for me to go and buy this, but what’s the process behind it?’ and I could see their wheels turning.”

    Kemp said introducing her students to the people — farmers, distributors, drivers, packagers and more — behind just one snack that they eat helped them understand the importance of each step taken between farm and table.

    “It doesn’t matter where you grow up or how you grow up. If you’re passionate about agriculture, there are unlimited possibilities for how you can act on this knowledge,” Kemp said.

    Michelle Howell of Need More Acres Farm agrees with Kemp’s sentiments.

    “I was raised by a single mom with limited access to fresh foods. Surprisingly, I was placed in an introductory agriculture class when I was in eighth grade and became fascinated by the power available to humans when they are actively engaged in the food system,” Howell said. “My biggest hope is that we are inspiring students to consider farming as their future career.”

    Stacy Vincent, director of undergraduate studies for Agriculture Education (AgEd) at Martin-Gatton CAFE, worked with Breazeale to bring this program to life.

    “For students to take ownership in a curriculum so that they are motivated to take social action to help their community is the highest level of curriculum engagement and impact,” Vincent said. “To know that agriculture has an influence in their social action is the icing on the cake.”

    To learn more about the Food, Farming and Community curriculum, visit https://cld.ca.uky.edu/food-farming-and-community.

    This material is based upon work that is supported by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture, U.S. Department of Agriculture, under award number 2020-38640-31521 through the Southern Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education program under subaward number 00002624. USDA is an equal-opportunity employer and service provider. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the view of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.



    This article was originally published by a uknow.uky.edu . Read the Original article here. .

    curriculum faculty food inspire Kentucky Local Roll systems youth
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleHow you can get major discounts on local restaurants thanks to new Charleston app
    Next Article This Week in Cleveland Food News: Paloma at Van Aken District Evolving and More

    Related Posts

    Did you know? Philadelphia cream cheese was born in Upstate NY and there’s a whole

    September 9, 2024

    Ian McNulty: New restaurants to try, old favorites to revisit in New Orleans for

    September 9, 2024

    Petit Pomeroy Now Open in River North

    September 9, 2024

    The old restaurant model is broken. So how is the third-generation Original Joe’s still

    September 9, 2024

    This Week’s Houston Events at Restaurants & Bars — September 15 Edition – Houston Food

    September 9, 2024

    Word On The Street Is That Chubby Fish Serves The Best Food In South Carolina

    September 9, 2024
    Trends News

    Tucson’s Casa Maria is feeding the community with food waste while fighting climate

    July 31, 20248 Views

    Healthy Eating at the Fair: CFAES Nutritionist Offers Suggestions

    July 26, 20246 Views

    SC Social Services agents arrest Greenwood Co. woman for SNAP fraud

    September 8, 20245 Views

    This pink ice cream paradise used to be a train station. Inside the sweet journey.

    July 31, 20244 Views
    Don't Miss
    Best Food Cities September 9, 2024

    Did you know? Philadelphia cream cheese was born in Upstate NY and there’s a whole

    If you’re eating a bagel with a Philadelphia cream cheese schmear while you read this,…

    Ian McNulty: New restaurants to try, old favorites to revisit in New Orleans for

    Petit Pomeroy Now Open in River North

    The old restaurant model is broken. So how is the third-generation Original Joe’s still

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from Food about art & design.

    Food

    Dairy Godmother makes ice cream dreams come true

    GoodDays: How Georgia natives changed the canned cocktail game

    Amherst Rotary Club brings back annual Wing Walk competition

    Desserts

    Cartoon-Themed QSR Desserts

    Trader Joe’s Shoppers Are Losing It Over This ‘Top Notch’ Dessert: ‘Best Cake For $5 You

    New Custard MKE Website Is A Treat For Dessert Fans

    Beverages

    Wawa Gives “Cheers to Classrooms” in all Florida and Alabama Stores with Free Any Size

    Pantera’s Dimebag Darrell honored with new liquor brand BlackTooth Beverages

    Can you mail alcohol in Kentucky? Rules to know before shipping

    © 2026 thenomnomnews.com
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • DMCA

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.