At-School Youth Farmers Markets: Can Hands-on Experience Purchasing Fruit and Vegetables Grown on BIOAg Farms Influence Valuation of Local Farming and Family Shopping Habits?

School-based youth farmers market tests whether hands-on purchasing shifts family habits and support for BIOAg farms.

Graphic that says BIOAg CSANR-funded project.

At-School Youth Farmers Markets: Can Hands-on Experience Purchasing Fruit and Vegetables Grown on BIOAg Farms Influence Valuation of Local Farming and Family Shopping Habits? Teaching youth about biologically intensive agriculture can drive wider societal support for BIOAg farming and expand equitable access to food from these production systems. This study will investigate how knowledge and consumption of BIOAg food among children (and by extension families) changes in response to youth farmers market experiences. We will utilize an innovative SNAP-Ed/agriculture extension collaboration to implement a student farmer’s market at a racially diverse, low-income elementary school. Students will be provided tickets for the market that when redeemed are doubled, mirroring SNAP’s Market Match EBT benefit. Family and youth behavior and knowledge change will be gauged through collection of the tickets at an actual farmers’ market, and evaluations framed as “homework” assignments completed by youth with caregivers. This project leverages the influential school environment that shapes children’s knowledge to increase awareness of and access to fruit and vegetables from biologically intensive, local farms among low-income diverse families.

Products from this Project

Project Lead

Bramwell, S.

People

Salafsky, A., Musser, A., and Bramwell, S.

Project Dates

2024–present

Area of Focus

  • Research Engagement & Communication

Topics

  • Community Engaged Research
  • Food Science & Nutrition
  • Food Systems

Project Status

In Progress

Collaborators

Funding Sources