The school food environment (SFE) is a potential setting for encouraging children’s healthy dietary behaviour(Reference Nelson, Bradbury and Poulter1). SFE are complex, influenced by many interconnected elements, including infrastructure, school staff, parents and wider community stakeholders and organisations(Reference McIsaac, Spencer and Chiasson2). Some definitions of the term SFE focus on food available through the canteen, vending machines and tuckshops(Reference Dreissen, Cameron and Thornton3,Reference Micha, Karageorgou and Bakogianni4) ; other definitions are broader, which, in addition to food available, also encompass the physical space, infrastructure and conditions where food is available(5). A ‘whole-school’ food approach to encouraging healthy dietary behaviour is advocated internationally. As well as education, this includes all school food provision, policies on food provided and brought from home, the physical school setting and parental engagement(Reference Langford, Bonell and Jones6,Reference Wang and Stewart7) . Existing instruments to assess SFE do not use this holistic definition, commonly assessing specific settings and aspects of the SFE, most often the canteen and physical attributes (e.g. presence of dining facilities and food provided)(Reference O’Halloran, Eksteen and Gebremariam8). Therefore, the extent to which schools adopt a ‘whole-school’ food environment (WSFE) is unclear. This research aimed to (i) develop a research instrument to capture WSFE; (ii) test the instrument in the primary school setting and (iii) demonstrate how the instrument can be used to identify areas of good practice or to be enhanced when implementing WSFE.
Methodology
A search of SFE literature and guidance (non-systematic) informed included instrument items. The search was conducted by one member of the research team in July 2018 using online databases (PubMed, Medline and Web of Science) and a search engine (Google). Broad search terms such as ‘school food environment’ and ‘assessing the school food environment’ were used to capture scientific publications of SFE interventions or experimental studies and measures of the SFE. UK Government web pages were visited directly to obtain school food standard policy documents and guidance documents for implementing the standards. Based on this search, an observation proforma and questionnaire were developed (see online supplementary material). The 16-item observation proforma captured detail on canteen areas, atmosphere, systems, food presentation and monitoring of pupil food intake, based on guidance for improving the school dining experience(9) and was completed by researchers. A 27-item questionnaire assessed school food policies, provision and activities, adapted from a previous school environment questionnaire(Reference Moore, Littlecott and Fletcher10) and was completed by school senior management/catering staff. Four research team members with experience of school-based nutrition research independently reviewed instrument items to assess face validity (i.e. that instrument items appeared to assess what was intended, were not assessing overlapping concepts and covered all aspects of the WSFE)(Reference Hinkin, Tracey and Enz11). Face validity was established as it was agreed that these criteria were met(Reference Hinkin, Tracey and Enz11) and therefore the instrument design was deemed appropriate. The instrument has not yet undergone further validity and reliability assessment as this stage of the research aimed to conduct an initial pilot test of the instrument for collecting WSFE data.
The instrument was pilot-tested to collect WSFE data as a secondary outcome of a food-based randomised-controlled trial in primary schools (Project DAIRE)(Reference Brennan, Lavelle and Moore12). Food environment data were collected October 2018 to March 2019. A researcher at each school canteen completed the observation proforma during lunch and the questionnaire was administered. Data were entered into SPSS (version 26) and descriptive analyses conducted. Areas of strength in implementing a WSFE (implemented by > 50 % of schools) and areas that could be enhanced (implemented by ≤ 50 %) were identified. Recommendations for optimising WSFE were developed based on these and school food guidance(9,13) .
Results
Testing the instrument to capture whole-school food environment
An observation was undertaken at all DAIRE schools (n 18). The questionnaire was completed by n 16 schools. Participating schools ranged in size (34–740 pupils) and geographical areas (urban n 13; rural n 5).
Physical setting
School canteens were multi-purpose halls or classrooms (n 10, 56 %) or separate facilities within school buildings/grounds (n 8, 44 %). At most schools, (n 15, 83 %) pupils eating school meals and packed lunches ate at separate tables or, at a few schools (n 2, 11 %), in separate rooms (Table 1). Eating areas were clean (n 18, 100 %) and largely spacious (n 15, 83 %). At some schools (n 6, 33 %), eating areas were deliberately welcoming, e.g. with artwork, bunting and table centrepieces. Most eating area atmospheres (n 14, 78 %) were busy and noisy (children chatting). Lunch periods were on average 27·5 min and a sense of rush for pupils to finish lunch was sometimes apparent (n 7, 39 %).
School meal queue systems were well controlled by teaching/canteen staff, and queue times were perceived as ‘reasonable’ (n 17, 94 %). Pupils had a choice of two meals at most schools (n 16, 89 %). Many schools displayed the term’s meal menu (n 15, 83 %); some also displayed the daily menu (n 7, 39 %). Foods on offer were not labelled (n 18, 100 %). Some schools (n 3, 17 %) displayed foods using serveware and creative presentation, such as cutting up fruit.
Food policies
Most schools (n 14, 88 %) already had a healthy eating policy or were developing one (n 2, 13 %), and policies were communicated to parents (n 13, 81 %) (Table 2). Some break-time snack policies were communicated as guidance (n 7, 44 %), whereas others were requirements (n 6, 38 %). Policies on suitable packed lunch foods were usually communicated as guidance (n 10, 63 %), rather than requirements. Pupil adherence to policy guidance/requirements was encouraged at some schools (n 7, 44 %), whereas other schools (n 4, 25 %) enforced adherence through contacting parents or not allowing pupils to eat non-adherent foods brought into school.
Some schools monitored or encouraged food intake during lunchtime (n 8, 44 %) (Table 1). In these eight schools, caterers encouraged pupils having school meals to take full meals and try fruit and vegetables (n 4, 50 %), verbally praising this (n 1, 13 %). Canteen supervisors monitored and encouraged pupils to eat their school meal or packed lunch (n 4, 50 %). At one school, designated senior pupils awarded stickers to other pupils in the canteen at lunchtime that brought ‘healthy’ packed lunches that complied with school healthy eating policy to school with them that day (n 1, 13 %). Several schools (n 13, 73 %) promoted nutrition messages through poster displays.
Food provision
Menu options influenced pupils’ decision to have a school meal, with chips being the most popular menu item (n 12, 75 %), followed by chicken curry and roast dinners (both n 6, 38 %) (Table 2). School meal food waste was estimated at 5–40 %, with > 50 % of schools stating potatoes (n 9, 56 %) and vegetables (n 8, 50 %) were commonly wasted. At just under half of schools (n 7, 44 %), pupils offered feedback on school meals to caterers, e.g. through pupil councils.
Many schools had a breakfast club (n 14, 88 %), providing foods through school funding or for purchase. All served cereal and toast or breads, with variation in additional foods offered. Half of the schools (n 8, 50 %) provided healthy break-time snacks for pupils through school funding or for purchase. At one school, pupils could purchase fruit after school (n 1, 6 %). More than half of schools ran ad hoc tasting sessions (n 10, 63 %) and cookery clubs (n 9, 56 %). Most schools held themed food days (n 14, 88 %) based on special events, e.g. Pancake Tuesday or fun days (n 5, 36 %), trying food from other cultures (n 3, 21 %), linked with curricular topics (n 1, 7 %) or a combination (n 4, 29 %). Most schools (n 13, 87 %) used school allotments for education, tasting and growing produce to take home. Food most commonly provided at school events was tea/coffee and biscuits, buns and desserts (n 6, 46 %).
Parental engagement in school food
In addition to communicating food policies, some schools also engaged parents in food activities, including school events (n 5, 31 %), invitation to a school meal with pupils (n 1, 6 %) and parents bringing food from their culture into school for pupil tasting (n 1, 6 %) (Table 2).
Whole-school food environment recommendations based on current strengths and areas for enhancement
Areas of good practice and where there was scope for change were apparent (Tables 1–2). Key areas of strength in implementing a WSFE were defined as areas implemented by > 50 % of schools and included measures in place to enhance physical eating environments, healthy eating policies with reinforcement via a range of meals and a range of school food activities such as tasting sessions and cookery activities. Areas of a WSFE approach that that could be enhanced were also identified (defined as implemented by ≤ 50 % of schools). These were combined and summarised as recommendations in Table 3.
Use of instrument to capture whole-school food environments
Both the observation proforma and questionnaire captured intended detail for most items. Some questionnaire items, however, were less well completed including items that required quantification and open-ended items on food policy enforcement and parental involvement. Additionally, the open-ended item to capture detail on themed food days largely did not capture specific foods offered at these events. It was apparent through analysing the questionnaire data that questions could be added to a number of areas covered including on FSM and food waste to capture further detail.
Discussion
To date, SFE research has largely focused on the presence of dining facilities and food provided within the canteen setting(Reference Rollings and Wells14). It is apparent from findings of a recent systematic review of methods of measuring the SFE that many existing instruments are designed to measure specific elements of the SFE, such as these physical attributes(Reference O’Halloran, Eksteen and Gebremariam8). WSFE approaches to healthy eating are recommended(Reference Langford, Bonell and Jones15). The developed instrument therefore builds on existing tools to capture detail on WSFE, including the physical setting, food policies, all food provision and parental engagement. The developed instrument is useful from a research perspective for capturing WSFE in primary schools, informing future interventions to improve children’s dietary behaviour and capturing effectiveness of interventions designed to improve SFE in research settings. To illustrate this, we captured data at baseline from schools involved in a food-based intervention(Reference Brennan, Lavelle and Moore12) and determined areas of strength or where improvement was required (using an arbitrary cut-off of 50 % of schools to determine this). The developed instrument could also formally be adapted for self-assessment use by schools to provide evidence of meeting whole-school food guidance, thereby encouraging best practice and consistency in food environments across schools.
Findings highlight that WSFE vary between participating schools, with differences in physical settings, food policies, food provision and level of parental engagement. Most schools had healthy eating policies, in line with existing literature(Reference Ronto, Rathi and Worsley16), but there was variation in policies and scope for enhanced policy implementation and monitoring. The need for consistent school food policies and monitoring of policy implementation has been acknowledged(Reference Lucas, Patterson and Sacks17). Food provision in the canteen and policies for foods brought into school aligned with school food standards. It was observed that healthy dietary behaviour could be further promoted through other areas of school food provision such as cookery activities and food-related events. There was also scope to enhance the physical setting (including food presentation) and parental involvement in school food. Consistent with these findings, school-based interventions to improve children’s dietary behaviour often incorporate cookery activities, food tasting, food-related events and elements to enhance food presentation(Reference Ensaff, Homer and Sahota18,Reference Storey, Pearce and Ashfield-Watt19) , suggesting that these are areas of the WSFE that could be further enhanced. Additionally, parental involvement has been identified as an element of whole school approaches to healthy eating that needs to be strengthened(Reference Langford, Bonell and Komro20). Success of whole-school approaches for encouraging healthy dietary behaviour have been demonstrated(Reference Langford, Bonell and Jones15), which highlights the value of schools making small changes to enhance the key food environment elements, and areas of good practice in implementing a WSFE, which were apparent at all schools, should be shared across schools.
The main limitation of the instrument is that it did not undergo validity and reliability testing beyond initial face validation by the research team. Additionally, suggested modifications to the instrument were outlined after data collection and analysis were complete. For example, the observation proforma largely included open-ended items to capture detail. Responses obtained for these items could be used to develop closed-response items to aid ease of future completion and analysis. A subjective indication of perceived acceptability of canteen queue times was captured. Quantifying queue times would provide further information, however, this would require additional research personnel during the observation and may be complex to capture. Perception of general food waste was captured through the questionnaire; however, an objective measure of food waste could be incorporated into the observation proforma to provide more detail on this issue and could capture kitchen and plate waste. Objectively measuring food waste would also require additional research personnel. Areas where further questions could be added to the questionnaire were highlighted. Specific food offered at themed food days could be assessed using an additional item. The free school meal (FSM) question asked whether FSM-eligible pupils took FSM, but a question could be added regarding what % of pupils were eligible for FSM which would provide context. Questions could also be added to capture participation in local community-focused food-based activity and school policy on celebratory/reward foods. While we aimed to capture many elements of the whole-school environment, it was not designed to measure food-related education or surroundings of the school, which would be important elements to add for future work.
Next steps to improve the instrument for future use would necessitate incorporating these suggested edits. To enhance the robustness of the instrument for use as a research tool, validity and reliability assessments would need to be conducted following amendment of the instrument, such as establishing face validity through review of the instrument by an expert panel external to the research team and conducting psychometric assessments such as test-re-test reliability of the instrument. The following next steps could also be implemented for future use of the instrument by schools for self-assessment of meeting school food guidance. A scoring protocol could be developed, perhaps also linked to identification of barriers and facilitators to change and, ultimately, lead to tailored recommendations for schools, always including the requirement for consultation with stakeholders before implementation. As an example, previous studies identified fiscal constraints as a significant barrier to implementation of such policies, whereas the provision of financial support was identified as a facilitator(Reference Ronto, Rathi and Worsley16). The instrument could be adapted for a similar range of applications in secondary schools. The developed instrument could be extended to include consideration of cost of changes to policy. Such an instrument would be more comprehensive and detailed than the checklist (with tick-boxes) aimed at principals to aid the adoption of a whole-school food approach that is already available for schools as guidance for inspection preparation(21). These next steps could ultimately enhance the sustainability of healthy SFE and optimise impact of such policies on pupils’ dietary behaviours.
Conclusion
A research instrument was developed and tested to measure WSFE in the primary school setting. The instrument captured desired detail, although potential modifications were identified and further validity and reliability testing of the instrument is required for future use as a research tool. Future adaptations of the instrument were also identified, such as for self-assessment use by schools. Using the instrument to measure current food environment across a range of schools enabled identification of recommendations that could be implemented to enhance SFE.
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements: We wish to thank the schools who participated in Project DAIRE for their valuable contribution to this research. The authors are grateful for the support received from local food industry partners, visiting experts from Queen’s University Belfast and personnel from Higher Education Colleges during the implementation of the trial. Authorship: J.V.W. was the Principal Investigator who formulated the research question, designed the study and directed the research. M.D., M.C.M.K., P.M.C., R.F.H., L.D., N.E.O.C., C.R.C., C.T.E. and D.M.C. advised on aspects of the study design and provided substantial support during implementation. S.E.M., S.F.B., JW and M.C.M.K. developed the school food environment data collection tool. sem conducted data collection and analysis and drafted the manuscript, D.O. revised the manuscript. S.F.B. and F.L. were also involved in data collection. All authors reviewed drafts of the manuscript. Ethics of human subject participation: This study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki, and all procedures involving research study participants were approved by the Queen’s University Belfast Ethics Committees for Social Sciences, Education and Social Work (Reference number: 038_1819) and Biological Sciences (Reference number: 0918-LavelleF). Written informed consent was obtained from all participating schools.
Conflict of interest:
There are no conflicts of interest.
Financial support:
This work was funded by Invest NI, Agri-Food Quest Competence Centre. The funder had no role in the design, analysis or writing of this article. Authors are members of the GENIUS network (https://geniusschoolfoodnetwork.com), which is supported by the UK Prevention Research Partnership (MR/S03756X/1), an initiative funded by UK Research and Innovation Councils, the Department of Health and Social Care (England) and the UK devolved administrations, and leading health research charities (https://mrc.ukri.org/research/initiatives/prevention-research/ukprp/).
Supplementary material
For supplementary material accompanying this paper visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980023001131