Business

FoodCorps Recruitment for 2018-19 School Year Begins

Play
Listen to this Article
3 minutes
Loading Audio... Article will play after ad...
Playing in :00
A
A
A

Students at Kohala Elementary School show off fresh cucumbers they harvested in their school garden with FoodCorps service member June Guo. PC: Kohala Elementary School.

The national FoodCorps program is currently accepting applications from emerging food justice leaders for the 2018-19 school year.

Service member positions will be available on Hawai‘i Island, as well as in communities in 16 states on the continental U.S. and in the District of Columbia.

The organization seeks up to 230 men and women with a passion for serving their communities, a commitment to social justice, and an interest in jump-starting their careers.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD
ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

More information about the program and applications are available online. The deadline to apply is March 15, 2018.

FoodCorps connects children in limited-resource communities to healthy food in schools in an effort to reduce childhood obesity and diet-related diseases. Selected service members dedicate one year of fulltime, paid, public service in school food systems, teaching hands-on lessons in growing, cooking and tasting food; collaborating with food service staff to steer students towards the healthiest options in the cafeteria; and working alongside school administrators and teachers to foster a school-wide culture of health.

FoodCorps provides valuable skills and training to service members who go through the program, setting them up for careers in school food, public health, and education. Benefits of AmeriCorps service include an $18,250 stipend, healthcare, training and a $5,920 education award.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

The Kohala Center, a Hawai‘i Island-based nonprofit organization, has served as the state partner for the FoodCorps program in Hawai‘i since 2013, providing resources and professional development support to service members, teachers, and school administrators to 24 service sites on Hawai‘i Island, Moloka‘i and O‘ahu.

“Professionally, FoodCorps has given me on-the-ground experience in how food and social welfare policies play out for people in underserved communities, and has helped me identify gaps and areas in need of reform,” said Maui native La‘akea Kaufman, a second-year FoodCorps service member at Waimea Elementary School on Hawai‘i Island. “My service has helped me realize how intertwined issues of food security and social, environmental, and economic justice are. This knowledge and experience will benefit me as I work toward a career in public health and policy. Personally, FoodCorps has offered me a direct way to give back to my community, the value of which cannot be understated.”

FoodCorps partners with community organizations and schools to address the root cause of childhood obesity and diet-related diseases: a lack of access and connection to healthy food. More than half of Hawai‘i’s public and charter school students qualify for free and reduced-price meals—an indicator of family food insecurity—and Pacific Islander children experience higher rates of diet-related diseases than their peers. Because America’s most vulnerable children consume a majority of their calories at school, FoodCorps seeks to improve children’s nutrition by expanding school garden programs; increasing procurement and consumption of fresh, locally grown food in schools; and conducting cooking lessons that incorporate fresh, healthy, and affordable ingredients.

ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW AD

In its first seven years, FoodCorps has brought important progress to the schools it serves, demonstrating measurable change to children’s eating habits and helping the schools it partners with become healthier environments. Hundreds of its AmeriCorps service members have introduced new healthy recipes into cafeterias, built and taught in hundreds of school gardens from Hawai‘i to Maine, and engaged thousands of volunteers and parents in their efforts.

“What we feed our children in school––and what we teach them about food there––shapes their health and success over a lifetime,” said Curt Ellis, FoodCorps co-founder and chief executive officer. “By joining FoodCorps, service members have a chance to do something incredibly important: connect children in their communities to healthy food, and give them the opportunity to grow, learn, and thrive.”

About FoodCorps
FoodCorps is a nationwide team of AmeriCorps leaders who connect kids to healthy food in school. FoodCorps places these leaders in limited-resource schools for a year of public service where they teach hands-on lessons in growing, cooking and tasting food, collaborate with food service staff to steer students towards the healthiest options in the cafeteria, and work alongside school administrators and teachers to foster a school-wide culture of health.

About The Kohala Center
Founded in the year 2000, The Kohala Center is an independent, community-based center for research, conservation and education. We turn research and ancestral knowledge into action, so that communities in Hawai‘i and around the world can thrive—ecologically, economically, culturally and socially.

Sponsored Content

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Stay in-the-know with daily or weekly
headlines delivered straight to your inbox.
Cancel
×

Comments

This comments section is a public community forum for the purpose of free expression. Although Big Island Now encourages respectful communication only, some content may be considered offensive. Please view at your own discretion. View Comments