Life in the Nutritional
Trenches
Providing high-quality
child care is difficult under the best circumstances. When you care
for
children whose families face serious financial and
nutritional issues, its even more challenging. Thats Amy
Cetrones daily reality.
As director of Positive Parenting Pre-School Center in McKees Rocks,
Pa., a center located downtown in a renovated bank building, she views
the local community and the nutritional education needs of its residents
with a hard-eyed honesty.
This was a railroad town, so it actually went down the tubes before the
steel mills did, she says. We have a lot of bars, fast food joints,
and discount stores, but no major industry. Most families dont have cars.
Theyre the working poor, struggling to get by with three or four
kids and average incomes well below poverty level. The husband might
work at a restaurant and the wife may work at a grocery store, and their
combined income for five people is under $40,000probably closer to
thirty. I know a young lady whos a college graduate. She and her
husband work in retail, and they qualify for WIC with their two kids. They
qualify for food stamps. Its not uncommon. Youre each making
$18,000 to $20,000 a year, and you have two kids, and youre barely
getting by.
Cetrone is quick to count her blessings: most of her preschools parents
are in their twenties and thirties; few are teen or single parents. Shes
fortunate to work with parents who feel a sense of ownership with the centers
programs and tell staff what they need.
In addition, the preschool shares the building with a WIC office
and a local farmers marketimportant allies in the fight for good
nutrition. Shes also enlisted Penn State Cooperative Extensions
nutrition education programs to help.
WIC is underused and the farmers market is used primarily by senior
citizens, Cetrone says. Were trying to get our parents to cook
more from scratch, so we bring programs in that help them use fresh things and
make things themselves. For instance, you can use pumpkins for a lot of other
things beside carvingsometimes you just need someone to show you how.
Thats where Pamela Heckman comes in. As a Penn State nutrition educator
in Allegheny County, she runs a twice-daily, twelve-week seminar that introduces
new foods and nutritional concepts to children and their parents.
Pam brings in activities that introduce the colors, textures, and aromas
of fruits and vegetables the kids might not be familiar with, Cetrone says. Pams
very personable and puts the kids at ease as she presents new foods, nutrition
concepts, and vocabulary phrases.
The second part of Heckmans program teaches parents new preparation
techniques. We sometimes have a hard time convincing parents to try
something new, Cetrone says. Everyone works, so who has the
time? But even though it takes a little effort, parents find it beneficial
in the long run, both health-wise and money-wise.
Heckman demonstrates cost-effective ways to prepare healthy
foods using ingredients available from food banks, farmers markets,
and other sources. Because of childhood obesity issues, she
stresses substituting
fruits for fatty, sugary snacks. Amazingly enough, the kids still love
her.
The kids think shes the best thing since sliced bread, Cetrone
says. Her first session covered germs and handwashing. She talked about
how important it is to wash hands properly, then she used a blacklight to show
the kids what they missed when they washed improperly. The parents were astounded;
she taught many of them, too. Now they look forward every week to her visits.
Gary
Abdullah