Teacher Debbie Earl knows when a student is hungry.
“They are checked out. They are looking down, they’re kind of playing with their pencil and paper, but there’s no engagement,” she says. “It’s absolutely something we see over and over again.”
There are other signs too.
“Sometimes they start having stomach pains, but sometimes it’s not the stomach, sometimes they have a headache. They’ll look kind of pale around their mouth.”
Earl has been an aide or a teacher at Cottonwood Community School for 18 years and currently teaches social studies to 5th and 6th graders. She is grateful for a new program that allows her and other teachers to offer snacks to children right in the classroom.
Partly funded through a grant from Health First Foundation, MO Packs for Teachers from Manzanita Outreach began this school year.
It works like this. Manzanita Outreach provides a box of about 100 snacks to each teacher every month. The package contains breakfast and granola bars, nuts, dried fruit, fruit snacks, and crackers – quick, nutritious options that children can choose from or teachers can dole out. The program is reaching 300 teachers at 12 schools in the Verde Valley area of Yavapai County.
About 21% of children in Yavapai County are food insecure, meaning they lack access to enough food for a healthy and active life. Manzanita Outreach, a food sharing nonprofit based in Cottonwood, aims to make Yavapai the first food-secure county in the U.S.
Earl said receiving MO Packs lets teachers know that someone has their back.
Manzanita Outreach understands “that we are working with kids who are on the edge, on the edge of not having things to eat and not being able to learn.”
The pandemic and inflation left even more families struggling to provide basic needs for their children. And although having snacks in the classroom might seem like a small piece of the food security puzzle, Earl says it is effective.
One of her students often complains about having a headache, and when asked if she had breakfast, the answer is usually no. “I get her something [to eat], and within 20 minutes, she’s able to learn; she’s able to pay attention.”
Health First Foundation believes children should be in the best possible shape for learning because education shapes a person’s future opportunities, employment, and income. It is a key social determinant of health. Education can lift someone out of poverty to sustain themselves, their health, and their family’s health.
Learn more about the ways you can give to help improve well-being in northern Arizona.
Mailing Address
PO Box 1832
Flagstaff AZ 86002