fredag 14 november 2014

Network-meeting in Iceland


Focusing on health

This year Iceland has the chairmanship in the Nordic Council of Ministers and its program New Nordic Food (II), the project Food, Children and Health together with our co-partner the network “BoMIN” (Sweden) had the opportunity to make a visit to Iceland. The aim was to share and exchange experiences in the field.

Beautiful view from a school window in Reykjavik.

You learn a lot when meeting and interacting with each other. I was informed that the Iceland introduced public food, with warm school lunch in the year 2000. It is a remarkable long time for public meals in Finland, that introduced warm school lunches in public school in the year of 1948. On Iceland it is mainly financed from municipalities and families pay some of the costs. In the end of the 90-ties they start a health promoting work in the country.


Iceland, Sweden and Åland/Finland meeting up:
Bryndís Jóna Jónsdóttir, Fredrik Ljung, Ellinor Christensson, Harriet Strandvik, 
Inga Birna Albertsdóttir, Sigrún Daníelsdóttir

It has been many years of strategically work for promoting a healthier society included the schools. The changing process goes thru numbers of health promotion project schools. We had the honour to visit two of them. One was a pre-school, under the name “Skolar”. The other was a secondary school, “Flengsborgarskolar”.


Pre-school, at "Skolar". The smal kids eat their meals together with an adult in the middel of an almost round table. The school was very popular with its strategic work for health.

In the afternoon after the school lunch we visit the Directorate of Health, where they told us about the background for health promoting activities on Iceland. The next focus is now strategic work with health promoting communities. But good changings starts with the kids. It was nice to see that many schools had been working actively for a long time focusing on health including work with nutrition.


Fish-soup of the day. My reflection on the lunch was: How can they increase the numbers of guests in the cantina? Surprisingly few were eating the lunch.

Proudly presenting certifications of health promoting work thru the years.

The cantina was integrating into the school system. The were active of offering good chooses of snacks and drinks. No sodas and not candies.

Good ideals

The small group from the Nordic network also had the opportunity to talk about what is going on, on Nordic level. There has been a lot of different project that easily can be transformed into other countries. During the day I was focusing on the method SAPERE and found out that it was not used in the schools. A interesting connection with senses and teaching about consciousness food consumption is the link to mindfulness.

Harriet teaching SAPERE at a school in Finland


The Flengsborgar school was in the beginning of working with mindfulness as a important part of young people today. They had got inspired from Scotland about the good effect of integrate it into schools. At the Flengsborgar school they had plans for introduce it also in the meals. We can al image how good it would be offering a calm and peaceful environment around (public) meals. I am sure it give good effect on the meal-situation and how the body assimilate nutrients.

We also picked up a good ideal of integrate students into the work of develop healthy chooses and activities. At Flengsborgar school they have had a competition of making new smoothie recipe’s. They let the student test out a recipe and make it in front of a audience, like a show for good food!

What is SAPERE?

The teaching method SAPERE was something new and it rise the question what it is? The word is Latin, and was taken from (homo) sapiens, it stands for tasting, smelling, but also clearness and wisdom. Jacque Puisais developed the method in France around the 80-ties. There were some remarkable good effects on pupils learning-skill in al subject when he introduced training in senses. It was then developed into topics like a sequences for teaching. 

In the 90-ties it started to developing in Sweden, it came to Grythyttan, in Örebro. It was translated into Swedish and in cooperation with staff both from kitchen and pedagogues it was learned out as a good learning tool in different communities in Sweden. After a while it also was spread to Finland. The method in Sweden is divided in 10 different lessons that can be integrated in normal curriculum during one semester. For the moment it is going to be republished and up-dated and it will be found free to use at the webpage of the Swedish Food Department, “Livsmedelsverket”.

In Finland there has been a large work of using the method in kindergarten. We are now talking about “Ruokakasvatus” in Finland. (Finish word for Food Education. It is called “Måltidspedagogik” in Sweden). I think that the method SAPERE is a very good function to build bridges between classroom and public meal.

Food Education. Same vegetable taste different, if you serve it in different ways.

What do the students learn from SAPERE? 

       Will learn about senses and individual taste
       Will learn the ability to express themselves
       Will develop consciousness consumer behaviour
       Will raise curiosity about new product and courses
       Will increase the variation in food consumption.

"Smörgåsbord" of ideals from Nordic countries

I will now collected and share some good projects and ideas of what is going on in Nordic countries and you can of cause steal ideas and get inspired of them!  

Sweden
- "FriskaBarn"  A evidence based method of how to increase good habits of food and physical activities. It is a self developed method focusing on the pedagogues (al staff) as a roll model: 
- A tool, "Skolmat Sverige" for evaluating school-meals in Sweden, focusing on nutritions:
- Here you can find the guidance in swedish: "Handboken: Mat för alla sinnen" . More information about the method is at the webpage, "Livsmedelsverket"

Norway
Fiskesprell: Tools for teachers in home economics and health subject of using fish and teaching about the benefit of fish-consumption. New material and guidelines are recently published. 

Finland
A new research in Finland about the effect of having SAPERE / Food Education in the curriculum. The research is only in finnish.
- Here is useful guidance from Finland, about SAPERE to be use for example in youth clubs: "Sinnrikt i matvärlden". (In swedish)
- Finland svenska Marthaförbund - an organization spreading the method among kids, in private kindergarden. They have a nice website: "Tack för maten"

Denmark
- Her you can find useful tools on the web in SAPERE in al nordic languages! "Säg MUMS till Norden!"

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