What Schools Do


Lesson Plan

Comment: I found this and thought it interesting because most people don’t know that lesson plans are a real part of early childhood. Years ago I had a big book of plans and stuck to it religiously. As the time passed, I realized that lesson plans are circular and that there are days and there are days. Often lesson plans are headed in some particular direction. With children four and older, this is really important to achieve goals.

With three year olds, it’s a catch as catch can. This year in our preschool class, we have been working on the alphabet, counting and listening to directions. Then the interest of the children changed and they discovered all the toys on the “I can do this all by myself” shelf, and a serious hiatus has put the alphabet on hold. It’s kind of ridiculous to drag a child away from serious building discovery to something he doesn’t want to do. So when the toys have been explored, we will gently go back to the letters and numbers.

This schedule in the article is a great plan for beginning teachers and teachers who need to explore very young children. Very young children, however, will pretty much explore on their own once they figure out how!

Lesson Plans

It’s not a comprehensive form, more of a guide to keep yourself on track or to alert parents or administrators to your plans. I always like to post something like this on my wall so that all interested parties would have an idea of what we were doing in class that week and it was helpful to keep me on track as well.

The curriculum enhancement space is for those of you who may have “extras” that go on, like when your kids leave class for Spanish, Dance or Computers. On days when the children aren’t going anywhere outside the classroom, I usually would focus on sign language to teach and reinforce the letter and color of the week.

You can fill it out something like this:

Pre-K Lesson Plan Sample

Apples

From World’s Healthiest Foods

Apples Apples

The warm scent and flavor of baking apples is a sure sign that fall is just around the corner. In Northern Hemisphere apples are in season from late summer to early winter. However, many varieties are available year round because they have been either kept in cold storage or imported from the Southern Hemisphere.

Apples are crisp, white-fleshed fruits with red, yellow or green skin. They range in taste from moderately sweet and refreshing to pleasantly tart depending on the variety. The apple is a member of the rose family, with a compartmentalized core that classifies it as a pome fruit.

Food Chart
This chart graphically details the %DV that a serving of Apples provides for each of the nutrients of which it is a good, very good, or excellent source according to our Food Rating System. Additional information about the amount of these nutrients provided by Apples can be found in the Food Rating System Chart. A link that takes you to the In-Depth Nutritional Profile for Apples, featuring information over 80 nutrients, can be found under the Food Rating System Chart.

Health Benefits

According to the latest research, the old saying, “An apple a day keeps the doctor away,” is fact, not just folklore. The nutritional stars in apples-fiber, flavonoids, and fructose-translate into apples’ ability to keep us healthy.

Cardio-Protective Fiber

Apples contain both insoluble and soluble fiber. One medium (5 ounces) unpeeled apple provides over 3 grams of fiber, more than 10% of the daily fiber intake recommended by experts. Even without its peel, a medium apple provides 2.7 grams of fiber.

Apple’s two types of fiber pack a double punch that can knock down cholesterol levels, reducing your risk of hardening of the arteries, heart attack, and stroke.

Apple’s insoluble fiber works like bran, latching on to LDL cholesterol in the digestive tract and removing it from the body, while apple’s soluble fiber pectin reduces the amount of LDL cholesterol produced in the liver. Adding just one large apple (about 2/3 of a pound) to the daily diet has been shown to decrease serum cholesterol 8-11%. Eating 2 large apples a day has lowered cholesterol levels by up to 16%!

A study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine confirms that eating high fiber foods, such as apples, helps prevent heart disease. Almost 10,000 American adults participated in this study and were followed for 19 years. People eating the most fiber, 21 grams per day, had 12% less CHD and 11% less CVD compared to those eating the least, 5 grams daily. Those eating the most water-soluble dietary fiber fared even better with a 15% reduction in risk of CHD and a 10% risk reduction in CVD.

LDL cholesterol isn’t the only harmful compound on apple’s removal list. Pectin grabs toxins like the heavy metals lead and mercury, and ushers them out of the body. Both the soluble and insoluble fibers in apples have cancer-protective activity since they relieve constipation and send potentially toxic substances out with the stools.

When it comes to bowel regularity, apple’s two types of fiber tackle the job-no matter what it is. Both the insoluble fiber in apples and their soluble fiber pectin help relieve constipation (thus helping to prevent diverticulosis and colon cancer). The insoluble fiber works like roughage, while the pectin, which is found primarily in the skin, acts as a stool softener by drawing water into the stool and increasing stool bulk. On the other hand, because pectin firms up an excessively loose stool, it’s also used to treat diarrhea.

Cardio-Protective Flavonoids

A type of pigment in apples that helps provide their color, flavonoids have been extensively researched and found to help prevent heart disease. Researchers in Finland followed over 5,000 Finish men and women for over 20 years. Those who ate the most apples and other flavonoid-rich foods (such as onions and tea), were found to have a 20% lower risk of heart disease than those who ate the least of these foods.

Apples have been singled out as one of the small number of fruits and vegetables that contributed to the significant reduction in heart disease risk seen in a recent meta-analysis of seven prospective studies. Of the more than 100,000 individuals who participated in these studies, those who diets most frequently included apples, tea, onions, and broccoli-the richest sources of flavonoids-gained a 20% reduction in their risk of heart disease.

Apple skin and onions are the two major food sources of a potent flavonoid called quercitin. If, in addition to eating an apple a day, you add 2 tablespoons of onion and 4 cups of green tea (also rich in flavonoids) to your menu, you, like the men who consumed these foods in another study, may have a 32% lower risk of heart attack than people who consume less of these foods.

Quercitin’s benefits derive from its antioxidant activity, especially when it teams up with another antioxidant, vitamin C, also found in apples, to bolster the body’s immune defenses. This dynamic antioxidant duo provides another way (in addition to fiber) through which apples protect against cancer and also helps prevent the free radical damage to LDL cholesterol that promotes heart disease.

Juice Ranked among the Highest in Antioxidant Activity

Not all fruit juices are the same. They differ markedly in the variety of phenolic compounds and antioxidant activity, according to Alan Crozier, Professor of Plant Biochemistry and Human Nutrition, who, with colleagues at the University of Glasgow, evaluated 13 commercially available popular juices.

Concord grapes came out on top with the highest and broadest range of polyphenols and the highest overall antioxidant capacity. (The main components in purple grape juice were flavan-3-ols, anthocyanins, and hydroxycinnamates, together accounting for 93% of the total phenolic content.)

Other top scorers were cloudy apple juice, cranberry juice and grapefruit juice.

Other research (Oszmianski J, Wolniak M, et al., Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture) has also found cloudy apple juice to be a healthier choice than clear since cloudy apple juices contain up to four times the amount of protective polyphenols as clear apple juices.

Results for the red grape juice were said to be equal to those for a Beaujolais red wine. Interestingly, however, white grape juice, mainly containing hydroxycinnamates, had the lowest total phenolic content.

The products analyzed were: Spray Classic Cranberry; Welch’s Purple Grape; Tesco Pure Pressed Red Grape; Pomegreat Pomegranate; Tesco Pure Apple (clear); Copella Apple (cloudy); Tesco Pure Grapefruit; Tesco Value Pure Orange (concentrate); Tropicana Pure Premium Smooth Orange (squeezed); Tropicana Pure Premium Tropical Fruit; Tesco Pure Pressed White Grape; Tesco Pure Pineapple; Del Monte Premium Tomato.

Dr. Crozier’s findings come shortly after those of the Kame project, which indicated that long-term fruit juice consumption can provide protection against Alzheimer’s disease (Dai et al., Am J Med), and suggest that, since each fruit juice contains its own array of protective phenols, drinking a variety may offer the best protection. Practical Tip: “The message is to mix these juices during the week. That way you will get all the compounds with anti-oxidant activity. If you drink only one juice you risk missing out on the compounds in the others,” explained Crozier.

Apples’ Flavonoids Provide Much More than Antioxidant Protection

Apples have long been touted as an excellent source of flavonoids that act as antioxidants, moping up oxygen free radicals that can damage DNA. Now, Eric Gershwin and colleagues from the University of California, Davis, US, have discovered a new way in which flavonoid-rich apples help protect against heart disease and cancers that goes beyond their flavonoids’ antioxidant effects.

The researchers prepared apple extracts from fresh Fuji, Golden Delicious, Red Delicious, and Granny Smith apples and added them to cultures of human endothelial cells (Endothelial cells make up the inner lining of our arteries. Their damage by oxidized cholesterol is one of the first steps in the development of atherosclerosis.)

After incubating the endothelial cells with apple extract, the researchers exposed them to tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a compound that triggers cell death and promotes inflammation by inducing a chemical signaling pathway called the nuclear factor (NF) kappa B pathway. The apple flavonoids were able protect the cells from the effects of TNF by inhibiting the signals in this pathway that would otherwise damage or kill cells. Gershwin and colleagues’ research, published in Experimental Biology and Medicine, shows that apple flavonoids protect cells from damage and death by interfering with communications between cells-a further mechanism than their antioxidant effects.

Fructose for Stable Blood Sugar Levels

Apples derive almost all of their natural sweetness from fructose, a simple sugar, but one which is broken down slowly, especially when combined with apples’ hefty dose of fiber, thus helping to keep blood sugar levels stable.

Prevent Kidney Stones

Want to reduce your risk of calcium oxalate kidney stones? Drink apple juice. A study published in the British Journal of Nutrition found that when women drank ½ to 1 liter of apple, grapefruit or orange juice daily, their urinary pH value and citric acid excretion increased, significantly dropping their risk of forming calcium oxalate stones.

Promote Optimal Health

Whole apple extracts-in amounts comparable to human consumption of one, three or six apples a day-were shown to prevent breast cancer in test animals in a study published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.

And apples worked in a dose-dependent manner; the more apples eaten, the more protection.

In a second study, published in Molecular Nutrition and Food Research, a polyphenol-rich extract of an apple juice blend powerfully inhibited the growth of human colon cancer cells in the laboratory.

However, when researchers put together a mixture containing only the bioactive compounds identified in apple juice so far (which included its proanthocyanidins and quercetin), the mixture was ineffective in inhibiting the growth of colon cancer cells.

They concluded that as yet unknown constituents contribute to apples’ potent protective qualities. The conclusion we draw at the World’s Healthiest Foods is that it is not single nutrients, but their synergy in whole, natural foods that is the source of their effectiveness in promoting health.

We definitely agree with the researchers in the first (breast cancer) study, who suggest that because apples are so richly endowed with phytonutrients capable of strong antioxidant and anticancer activities and are so universally enjoyed, eating an apple (or two) a day may be effective (and we’d add easy and inexpensive) way to lessen the incidence of breast (and colon) cancer.

Natural Sun Protection

It’s long been known that apple peel contains high concentrations of special antioxidant compounds called phenols that may assist in the prevention of a number of chronic diseases. Now it appears that the phenols in the skin of certain cultivars of apples may provide a hefty dose of UV-B protection, according to a study published in the Journal of Experimental Botany. Researchers evaluated both Granny Smith and Braeburn apples, with Braeburns being the clear winner in terms of their ability to accumulate UV-B protective quercitin glycosides in their sun-exposed skin. Sun-kissed Braeburns were resistant to high doses of UV-B radiation (up to 97kJ m-2). Next time you plan to spend time in the sun yourself, start your day with a Braeburn apple or bring one or two along for lunch and snacks.

Review Study Provides Even More Reasons to Enjoy Apples

A major review study published in the Nutrition Journal provides dozens of reasons to enjoy an apple every day.

A review study is one that looks at the results of many other studies. This one included an analysis of 85 studies. Apples were found to be most consistently associated with a reduced risk of cancer, heart disease, asthma, and type 2 diabetes when compared to other fruits and vegetables. In addition, eating apples was also associated with increased lung function and increased weight loss.

Here are some of the reasons why:

Apples are a rich and very important source of phytonutrients, including flavonoids and phenols, in the American diet and in Europe. In the United States, 22% of the phenolic compounds consumed from fruits come from apples, making them the largest source of phenols in the American diet.

When compared to other fruits, apples ranked second in total concentration of phenolic compounds, and perhaps more importantly, had the highest portion of free phenols. Since free phenols are not bound to other compounds in the fruit, they may be more available for absorption into the bloodstream.

Apples are also an excellent source of antioxidants, and when compared to many other commonly consumed fruits in the United States, were found to have the second highest level of antioxidant activity. Many of the phytonutrients found in apples, including quercetin, catechin, phloridzin and chlorogenic acid, are strong antioxidants.

The total antioxidant activity of 100 grams of whole apple (with the peel) was found to be equivalent to the antioxidant effect of about 1500 mg of vitamin C. (However, the amount of vitamin C in 100 g of apples is only about 5.7 mg. Nearly all of the antioxidant activity from apples comes from a variety of other compounds.)

Whole apples, especially their peels, have been found to have a number of powerful antioxidant effects, one of which is to protect VLDL and LDL (“bad”) cholesterol from oxidation. Yet when quercitin, one of the most important antioxidant flavonoids in apples, was tested by itself in laboratory animals, it had no protective effect. And when apple flesh and apple juice were tested, they provided less than a tenth the benefit of whole apple.

Apples’ protective effects against free radical damage to cholesterol reach their peak at three hours following apple consumption and drop off after 24 hours, providing yet another good reason to eat a whole fresh apple a day.

In animal studies, apples have also been shown to lower LDL (“bad”) cholesterol while raising beneficial HDL cholesterol. Not only did the laboratory animals in these studies produce less cholesterol, but they also excreted more in their feces when fed apples, pears and peaches-but apples had the greatest cholesterol-lowering effect.

In the most recent studies, investigators found that the combination of apple pectin and apple phenols lowered cholesterol and triglycerides to a much greater extent than either apple pectin or phenols alone. This again suggests a beneficial synergy between the many healthful compounds found in apples and supports eating the whole fruit instead of simply drinking apple juice, eating peel-free applesauce or taking fiber supplements.

Apples have also been shown to greatly inhibit the growth of liver and colon cancer cells in several studies. In one study, at a dose of 50 mg/mL, liver cancer cell proliferation was inhibited by 39% by extracts of whole Fuji apple and 57% by whole Red Delicious extracts. In another study in which colon cancer cells were treated with apple extracts, cell proliferation was inhibited 43% at a dose of 50 mg/mL.

Promote Optimal Health

Eating an apple a day may also offer significant protection against breast cancer, suggests an animal study published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry . When laboratory animals with breast cancer were fed the human equivalent of 1, 3 or 6 apples a day for 6 months, their tumors shrank by 25%, 25%, and 61%, respectively.

Researchers credit apples’ strong protective action to the synergistic interactions among the wide variety of potent antioxidant and antiproliferative phytonutrients, including phenolics and flavonoids, they contain.

In several large epidemiological (population) studies conducted in the United Kingdom, Finland and the Netherlands, apple consumption (a minimum of 2 apples per week) was found to be inversely linked with asthma and type 2 diabetes, and positively associated with general lung health. Researchers attribute apples’ protective effects in these conditions to apples’ high concentration of anti-inflammatory flavonoids, such as quercitin and catechin.

In addition to their beneficial effects against chronic diseases including cancer, cardiovascular disease, asthma and diabetes, apples may also help combat cholera. Recently, crude extracts from immature apples were found to inhibit cholera toxin in a dose dependent manner by up to 98%.

Variation in Antioxidant Phytonutrients Among Different Types of Apples

Researchers have found distinct differences in total phenolic and flavonoid content among different apple varieties:

Of the four common varieties used for applesauce (Rome Beauty, Idared, Cortland, and Golden Delicious), Rome Beauty had the highest phenolic content.

Out of 10 varieties commonly consumed in the U.S., Fuji apples had the highest total phenolic and total flavonoid compounds, but Red Delicious apples were also quite high. These apple varieties also tended to have higher antioxidant activity.

Apple phytonutrient content is not greatly affected by storage. After 100 days, the amount of phenolic compounds in the skin begins to decrease slightly, but even after 200 hundred days in cold storage, the total amount of these compounds remains close to the level at the time of harvest.

However, processing apples into juice greatly lowers their phytonutrient content. Apple juice obtained from Jonagold apples by pulping and straight pressing had only 10% of the antioxidant activity of fresh apples, while juice obtained after pulp enzyming had only 3% of fresh apples’ antioxidant activity.

The take home message: store apples in the refrigerator and enjoy a sweet, crunchy, whole apple at least 2-3 times each week.

A Flavonoid Unique to Apples May Help Prevent Menopausal Bone Loss

A flavonoid found only in apples called phloridzin may help prevent bone loss associated with menopause, suggests a study published in Calcified Tissue International..

A side effect of the sex hormone changes that occur during a woman’s transition through menopause is a tendency towards increased inflammation and free radical production, which in turn, promotes bone loss.

Because of their anti-inflammatory actions, polyphenols have been suggested as one means of protecting against bone loss during this pro-inflammatory time in women’s lives.

To test this theory, French researchers ovariectomized lab animals (to simulate menopause) and divided them into two groups, which were given either a control diet or a diet supplemented with phloridzin for 80 days. Three weeks before the animals were sacrificed, 10 animals in each group were put into an inflammatory state.

While all the animals on the control diet lost bone, and those in the inflammatory state lost even more bone, the rats receiving phloridzin not only did not lose bone, but actually increased bone mineral density-even if they were experiencing a high inflammatory state!

If you’re moving through menopause, eating an apple a day may help you keep bone loss at bay.

Description

Apples are a crisp, white-fleshed fruit with a red, yellow or green skin. The apple is actually a member of the rose family, which may seem strange until we remember that roses make rose hips, which are fruits similar to the apple.

Apples have a moderately sweet, refreshing flavor and a tartness that is present to greater or lesser degree depending on the variety. For example, Golden and Red Delicious apples are mild and sweet, while Pippins and Granny Smith apples are notably brisk and tart. Tart apples, which best retain their texture during cooking, are often preferred for cooked desserts like apple pie, while Delicious apples and other sweeter varieties like Braeburn and Fuji apples are usually eaten raw.

History

The apple tree, which originally came from Eastern Europe and southwestern Asia, has spread to most temperate regions of the world. Over the centuries, many hybrids and cultivars have been developed, giving us the 7,000 varieties in the market today.

Apples have long been associated with the biblical story of Adam and Eve, although there is actually no mention that, in fact, the fruit in question was actually an apple. In Norse mythology, apples were given a more positive persona: a magic apple was said to keep people young forever. Apples’ most recent appearance in history occurred in the 1800s in the U.S., when Johnny Appleseed-a real person named John Chapman, despite the mythological quality of his tale-walked barefoot across an area of 100,000 square miles, planting apple trees that provided food and a livelihood for generations of settlers.

How to Select and Store

Look for firm fruits with rich coloring. Yellow and green apples with a slight blush are best. Your preference for a sweeter or more tart fruit and whether you plan to enjoy your apples raw or cooked will guide your choice of variety. Just remember that Red and Golden Delicious are among the sweetest apples. Braeburn and Fuji apples are slightly tart, and Gravenstein, Pippin and Granny Smith apples are the most tart, but retain their texture best during cooking.

In the northern hemisphere, apple season begins at the end of summer and lasts until early winter. Apples available at other times have been in cold storage or are imported from the southern hemisphere.

Whole apples are a much better nutritional choice than apple juice. Not only are whole apples richer in dietary fiber, but the current processes of juicing seem to drastically reduce the polyphenolic phytonutrient concentrations originally found in the whole fruit.

When selecting apple juice, chose cloudy rather than clear juices:

Researchers evaluated the polyphenolic content of clear and cloudy apple juices from Idared and Champion varieties. Cloudy juices, particularly those prepared from apples of the Champion variety, had a much higher content of procyanidins (a type of flavonoid) than clear juices.

Cloudy juice from Champion apples contained 1,044 milligrams of polyphenols per liter, while clear juice made from Idared apples contained only 250 milligrams per liter. When the juices’ ability to neutralize free radicals was evaluated, cloudy Champion apple juice neutralized 93% of the radicals after 3 minutes, compared to only 24% for the clear Idared juice.

How to Enjoy

In addition to being eaten raw, apples are a wonderful addition to a variety of recipes from salads to baked goods. For some of our favorite recipes, click Recipes.

Tips for preparing apples:

Rinse apples under clear running water like you would any fruit. If organic, don’t peel unless the recipe you have chosen requires peeled apples.

To prevent browning when slicing apples for a recipe, simply put the slices in a bowl of cold water to which a spoonful of lemon juice has been added.

For use in future recipes, sliced apples freeze well in plastic bags or containers.

A few quick serving ideas:

Add diced apples to fruit or green salads.

Braise a chopped apple with red cabbage.

Looking for an alternative to sweet desserts? Sliced apples (either alone or with other fruits) and cheese are a European favorite.

Try our wonderful Apple Tart in the recipe file.

Safety

Apples and Pesticide Residues

Virtually all municipal drinking water in the United States contains pesticide residues, and with the exception of organic foods, so do the majority of foods in the U.S. food supply. Even though pesticides are present in food at very small trace levels, their negative impact on health is well documented. The liver’s ability to process other toxins, the cells’ ability to produce energy, and the nerves’ ability to send messages can all be compromised by pesticide exposure. According to the Environmental Working Group’s 2006 report “Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides in Produce,” apples are among the 12 foods on which pesticide residues have been most frequently found. Therefore, individuals wanting to avoid pesticide-associated health risks may want to avoid consumption of apples unless they are grown organically.

If you do purchase non-organic apples, you may want to ask your grocer about the kind of wax used to protect the apple’s surface during storage or shipping. Carnauba wax (from the carnauba palm tree), beeswax, and shellac (from the lac beetle) are preferable to petroleum-based waxes, which contain solvent residues or wood resins.

Nutritional Profile

Apples are a good source of dietary fiber and vitamin C.

Most of the apple’s fiber is contained in its skin, as is the majority of its quercitin. Unfortunately, in conventionally grown apples, the apple skin is also the part most likely to contain pesticide residues and may have toxic residues if covered in petroleum-based waxes. Since peeling results in the loss of apples’ flavonoids and most of its valuable fiber, choose organically grown apples whenever possible.

For an in-depth nutritional profile click here: Apples.

In-Depth Nutritional Profile

In addition to the nutrients highlighted in our ratings chart, an in-depth nutritional profile for Apples is also available. This profile includes information on a full array of nutrients, including carbohydrates, sugar, soluble and insoluble fiber, sodium, vitamins, minerals, fatty acids, amino acids and more.

Introduction to Food Rating System Chart

The following chart shows the nutrients for which this food is either an excellent, very good or good source. Next to the nutrient name you will find the following information: the amount of the nutrient that is included in the noted serving of this food; the %Daily Value (DV) that that amount represents; the nutrient density rating; and the food’s World’s Healthiest Foods Rating. Underneath the chart is a table that summarizes how the ratings were devised. Read detailed information on our Food and Recipe Rating System.

Apples
1.00 each
138.00 grams
81.42 calories
Nutrient Amount DV
(%)
Nutrient
Density
World’s Healthiest
Foods Rating
dietary fiber 3.73 g 14.9 3.3 good
vitamin C 7.87 mg 13.1 2.9 good
World’s Healthiest
Foods Rating
Rule
excellent DV>=75% OR Density>=7.6 AND DV>=10%
very good DV>=50% OR Density>=3.4 AND DV>=5%
good DV>=25% OR Density>=1.5 AND DV>=2.5%

In-Depth Nutritional Profile for Apples

HotStop Scald Protection Faucets

Comment: Here’s a product for your home. For many parents this is a real problem with eager little hands and a possible danger zone. So here is something to consider for your child’s safety.

HotStop Scald Protection Faucets Prevent Hot Water Burns.
Innovative product line offers an effective & affordable way to
protect kids and seniors.
www.h2otstop.com

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hot water faucet handle. The force of 140°F water knocked her
down and in seconds caused 3rd degree burns over most of her
body – she died several days later.

Unfortunately reports of scalding injuries like this are
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tap water scalds are the second most common cause of severe burn
injuries among people of all ages. But now a new product line
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Spouts & Showerheads are aiming to decrease those numbers
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How does HotStop work? – www.h2otstop.com When hot water reaches
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For more information go to: www.h2otstop.com HotStop faucets and
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American Valve – (877) 531-7470

Breakfast News!


Comment: I did a workshop this morning at the University of Southern Indiana about nutrition and diet. I got an ovation! I was so pleased. It was fun, and I learned a lot by talking with the participants. The reality was stated very quickly – most parents today don’t cook, and most children don’t eat – those are the problems we are facing in early childhood. These are not ho-hum problems too boring to think about; these are fundamental problems that will cause the generation we are rearing right now not to live as long as their parents, and that’s a shame.

With diabetes on the rise, with heart trouble the number one killer, with cancer on the rise, we are only contributing to these problems because of our failure to understand what food is supposed to be about. It matters to the health and safety of our children.

Did you know that excessive soda consumption will cause bone loss?

Did you know that white flour foods like white pasta, white bread and buns (ie fast food) and white rice can actually CAUSE colon cancer?

These are not wives tales; they are scientific fact.

Here’s a great article from Food Navigator about breakfast:

Insoluble fibre aids obesity, diabetes prevention says study

By Laura Crowley


10/19/2007 A breakfast high in insoluble fibre could aid weight loss by reducing appetite, lowering food intake and reducing the glycemic response to a meal consumed 75 minutes later, according to new research.


The human study, based on 31 healthy young men, found that consuming insoluble fibre at breakfast time reduced subsequent food intake by 15.5 per cent.

The research results, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, help to explain why the consumption of insoluble fibre, as opposed to soluble dietary fibre, may have a role in controlling obesity and related metabolic disorders such as diabetes.

Insoluble fibre contains cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin and cannot be dissolved in water, unlike soluble fibre. It is found in wheat or cereal bran and in most vegetables and fruits.

Consumption of insoluble fibre has previously been associated with a reduced risk of obesity and diabetes, but the biological mechanism underlying the benefits has only been assumed.

The assumption was that the fibre reduced the glycemic response (a rise in blood glucose), thereby increasing satiety and decreasing energy intake. A lower glycemic response decreases the demand for insulin, therefore reducing the risk of type 2 diabetes.

However, most studies that have tested the responses to dietary fibre have involved highly complex foods that contain both soluble and insoluble fibre as well as other biologically active substances.

In this study, Rania Samra and colleagues from the University of Toronto conducted two experiments on men aged between 20 and 35.

In experiment one, 16 men were divided into four groups and given one of four breakfasts. The first was a cereal with 33g of insoluble fibre, the second contained 1g of fibre, the third was white bread (which typically contains 0.56g of fibre), and the last was a control breakfast comprising only water. All three were served with milk.

Blood glucose levels were measured at 15 minute intervals before and after the breakfast up to 75 minutes post breakfast, and subjective appetite and total food intake was recorded.

Food intake was lower for the high fibre cereal (937 kcal) and white bread (970 kcal) groups compared to the low fibre cereal (1109 kcal) groups. Appetite was lower in the high fibre and low fibre cereal groups compared to the white bread groups.

In experiment two, which involved 15 men, a pizza meal (850 kcal) was consumed 75 minutes after the breakfast, and blood glucose levels again then taken at 15 minute intervals.

Blood glucose was raised in the low fibre and white bread group, but the time patterns of raised glucose levels were different between the two. Blood glucose levels remained constant in the high fibre group.

The authors concluded that a high fibre ready-to-eat breakfast cereal suppressed appetite, reduced food intake and improved the glycaemic response to a meal consumed 75 minutes later.

The recommended fibre consumption in the UK is 18g per day. In France it is 25 to 30g, and in Germany it is 30g. In each of these countries, average consumption is lower than these levels.

These results indicate the importance of fibre in a healthy diet and the benefits of functional and weight management foods having high insoluble fibre content.

Source: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
Published online October 2007, 86 (4): 972-979
Authors: R. A. Samra, G. H. Anderson

Cayman Islands



Comment:

This is such a heart warming story…I couldn’t resist!

Almost all of life’s valuable lessons are learned from kindergarten -whether it be learning to share, practicing good hygiene, or cooperating to achieve a certain goal. Early childhood education provides children with the foundation that defines the kind of persons we become in the future.

It is with these in mind that the Cayman Islands Early Childhood Association (CIECA) was established and continues to do so a decade after. During their 10th Anniversary Celebration last Saturday, 13 October 2007, CIECA members were recognised for their commitment towards nurturing, caring for and educating young children and were encouraged to continue their efforts.

Keynote speaker Canover Watson likened children to a garden and said for them to grow, it is imperative to keep out the weeds regularly.

Minister of Education Hon Alden McLaughlin, in his congratulatory remarks, expressed his support for the organisation by saying, “Educating our children is the best investment that the Cayman Islands Government could make.”

Minister McLaughlin broke the news that the Early Childhood Unit is no longer called such, but has been converted to Early Childhood Services for the fact that it has grown in scope. The Early Childhood educators were even more delighted to hear that Cayman Brac now has its own Early Childhood Services office.

The Early Childhood Services specialise in enhancing the services of early education providers all over the Islands. They provide curriculum advice, conduct inspections and offer training to early years staff.

The CIECA members and other guests were treated by Wendy’s to a sumptuous dinner at the Marriott Resort. “Wendy’s is proud to be the supporting sponsor for the 10th Anniversary Dinner of CIECA. We believe that quality child care has positive effects, will contribute to children’s health, well-being and long term school success, as well as result into long lasting effects for socio and economic self-sufficiency and good citizenry,” said John D. Jefferson Jr, Managing Director/ Chairman of Wendy’s.

The event began with a wonderful rendition of the National Song by the 1st grade Class of Triple C School and continued with another musical treat by the John Gray High School Swing Band.

Would you believe?

Today’s Recipe

Comment: I will definitely be making these for Anne. I could do black beans for Amy; and serve them with sour cream; Navy beans for Kelly and serve them with ketchup; Garbanzo beans and serve them with cheese for Edith; and for me… all together in a medley with horseradish and raw onion! For the kids – we’ll sneak them in and I’ll report back later…

This an unusual way to serve lima beans that is easy, tastes great and makes a wonderful alternative to mashed potatoes.

Pureed Lima Beans with Rosemary Tomato Broth

Prep and Cook Time: 15 minutes

Ingredients:

  • Tomato Broth
  • 1 = cups chicken stock
  • 4 cloves garlic coarsely chopped
  • = medium onion chopped
  • 1 TBS tomato paste
  • = tsp finely chopped fresh rosemary
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • Beans
  • 2 15 oz cans lima beans, rinsed and drained,
  • 1 medium onion chopped
  • <>
  • 2 medium cloves garlic, pressed
  • salt and white pepper to taste

Directions:

  1. Healthy Sauti onion for broth 5 minutes over medium low heat for 5 minutes stirring frequently. Add garlic and continue to sauti for another minute.
  2. Add chicken stock and tomato paste. Cook on high heat for about 20 minutes to reduce. Reduce to half the volume. Strain liquid and return to saucepan, discarding onion and garlic. Season with rosemary, salt and pepper.
  3. While broth is reducing Healthy sauti onion for beans in medium sauti pan over medium low heat for 5 minutes stirring frequently. Add beans, stock, salt and pepper.
  4. Simmer for another 3-4 minutes. Puree bean mixture with pressed garlic in blender. Stop blender occasionally to scrape sides with a rubber spatula.

    Serve beans drizzled with tomato broth.

    Serves 4

Boys by Robynn



And you also find out interesting things when you have sons, like…

1. A king size waterbed holds enough water to fill a 2000 sq. ft. house 4 inches deep.

2. If you spray hair spray on dust bunnies and run over them with roller blades, they can ignite.

3. A 3-year old Boy’s voice is louder than 200 adults in a crowded restaurant.

4. If you hook a dog leash over a ceiling fan, the motor is not strong enough to rotate a 42 pound Boy wearing Batman underwear and a Superman cape. It is strong enough, however, if tied to a paint can, to spread paint on all four walls of a 20×20 ft. room.

5. You should not throw baseballs up when the ceiling fan is on. When using a ceiling fan as a bat, you have to throw the ball up a few times before you get a hit. A ceiling fan can hit a baseball a long way.

6. The glass in windows (even double-pane) doesn’t stop a baseball hit by a ceiling fan.

7. When you hear the toilet flush and the words ‘uh oh’, it’s already too late.

8. Brake fluid mixed with Clorox makes smoke, and lots of it.

9. A six-year old Boy can start a fire with a flint rock even though a 36-year old Man says they can only do it in the movies.

10. Certain Lego’s will pass through the digestive tract of a 4- year old Boy.

11. Play dough and microwave should not be used in the same sentence.

12. Super glue is forever.

13. No matter how much Jell-O you put in a swimming pool you still can’t walk on water.

14. Pool filters do not like Jell-O.

15. VCR’s do not eject ‘PB & J’ sandwiches even though TV commercials show they do.

16. Garbage bags do not make good parachutes.

17. Marbles in gas tanks make lots of noise when driving.

18. You probably DO NOT want to know what that odor is.

19. Always look in the oven before you turn it on; plastic toys do not like ovens.

20. The fire department in Austin, TX has a 5-minute response time.

21. The spin cycle on the washing machine does not mak e earthworms dizzy..

22. It will, however, make cats dizzy.

23. Cats throw up twice their body weight when dizzy.

24. 80% of Women will pass this on to almost all of their friends, with or without kids.

25. 80% of Men who read this will try mixing the Clorox and brake fluid.

Cranberries!


Comment: I just bought a bag to freeze. I make cranberry muffins all year round. By the time Christmas rolls around, there will be about ten pounds in my freezer. You can’t get them anytime but right now.

10/17/2007 With the Thanksgiving season approaching, Ocean Spray is launching a creative marketing campaign to spread awareness of the healthy aspects of cranberries.

Used in the popular sauce that accompanies the turkey of festive meals in North America, cranberries have been linked particularly to urinary tract health. But with the benefits of the berries being made known, the ingredients are being used in more food and beverage applications. Subsequently, in 2006, Ocean Spray posted fiscal sales of roughly $1.5b.

While in the US, the berries hold no health claims, Ocean Spray has in large part carried the message through to consumers via awareness campaigns that do not form part of its direct product or juice ads.

Accordingly, the health link appears to have been widely registered by the public, and demand for the berries has subsequently grown.

The cranberry giant’s latest initiative is the “bogs across America” tour it is bringing to New York City, Chicago and Los Angeles. The company says it will transform landmark sites in these cities into a sea of red berries.

Each free-standing bog exhibit will contain about 2,000 pounds of cranberries brought in from Ocean Spray bogs across the country.

“While most Americans are already fans of the traditional cranberry sauce, log or relish found on many Thanksgiving tables, few realize the year-round versatility and rich history of the cranberry-one of only three fruits native to North America,” announced the producer.

Ocean Spray, which claims to produce around two thirds of the cranberries on the US market, will underscore the feel-good qualities of cranberries – taste, health and heritage – via the campaign.

To meet growing demand, the company announced in August it is investing $27m to expand its Wisconsin plant by a further 100,000 square feet. This is set to be completed in 2009, and will allow for an overall production capacity of over 30 million pounds of sweetened dry cranberries per year.

Similarly, in 2006, the company announced increased demand had spurred it to initiate a $50m first phase extension to the same plant.

According to Ocean Spray, demand for dried cranberries in particular is driving this growth. It says these are increasingly being used as ingredients in processed foods and beverages thanks to new research indicating dried cranberries offer identical anti-bacterial properties to cranberry juice.

While consumers largely identify cranberry’s healthy attribute as being its ability to help ward off urinary tract infections, the berries also contain anti-oxidants and are said to be good for heart health and to reduce ulcers and gum disease.

Ocean Spray will set up its bogs at New York’s Rockefeller Center, Chicago’s Tribune Tower and Los Angeles’ Hollywood & Highland Center.

The Garden School Tattler

It’s Wednesday already! It’s been a relatively calm week. I wish it would rain. Actually the children have really enjoyed the cooler weather, and have been busy playing outdoors.

Inside, we’ve been painting and saving some of our work back for an art show we are planning in November just after Halloween. The art show takes a lot of work, but it’s a great way of showing parents just how wonderful children’s art is. I know that often parents pick up work and papers from children’s envelopes, and barely look at what seems like a mess on a page. But when you begin to look carefully at the painting or drawing, you begin to see some special little things that are expressions of your child’s thoughts and feelings.

Some of you have received framed art that we have made for you. We do this when a painting is exceptional and we have a frame to fit it. This is the kind of thing we will be doing in November. We will probably have the art show on Thursday and Friday after 3:00, so when you come to pick up your child, you can view their work.

There will be a small price to pay for each piece, and this enables us to continue to buy frames and art supplies. I think my last bill for supplies was $186.00, and I still need to buy colored paper!

Children’s framed art makes wonderful grandparent gifts for Christmas. We will make sure each child has at least 4 pieces. Some will be big and some small – depends on the child and the art!

In preschool class, we try to do art every day. On Monday we have a drawing lesson; on Tuesday we try to string something; on Wednesday we use colored paper and glue; on Thursday we paint, and on Friday we work with some kind of clay.

Part of our art lesson involves commanding the materials; part of the project is invention, and part is expression. Important? Art is probably the most important part of preschool because it involves all the emotional strengths while it allows the child to express himself within a set of rules. Never again will he be so free.

What we find as teachers is that few children know anything about the mechanism of art because they have not been taught. When they finally begin to understand how the whole thing works, they love it. We have found several fine artists among our wonderful children.

Encourage art at home. Put some restrictions on space, and use of materials. The kitchen table makes a great art place. Put crayons in a bowl to be used one at a time. Art supplies never never leave the table! Paint is left flat to dry – water cups above paper, and tempera is always poured into small disposible cups and used on newspaper.

Home made play dough: 1 cup salt melted into 3/4 cup warm water; 2 Tablespoons of vegetable oil, and 2 cups white flour. Mix like bread dough. This should not be sticky. If it is, continue to add flour.

Junk Food


Comment: FYI – I found a new site and think it’s interesting. As I move forward in working with the coalition on nutrition problems and put together the workshop for this coming Saturday, I find more and more that seems to interest me. I hope it interests readers. Nutrition is one of the things we as early childhood teachers can entrust to the children and families in our care. Discovering new foods, enjoying new ways of making and eating foods, and learning about food is a life long project.

From Food Navigator.com

Marketing to kids: Nestle, Dannon non-committal could lead to regulations

By Lorraine Heller

10/12/2007- Nestle and Dannon, two of the nation’s leading food companies, have declined to join a widespread industry move to limit advertising of unhealthy foods to children.

This non-committal at a voluntary level could well lead to the consideration of new regulations, according to the chairman of the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet Edward Markey.

Nestle and Dannon, which were amongst the last big firms to announce voluntary measures to restrict their marketing of ‘junk food’ to children, were last month contacted by Chairman Markey.

Other companies to receive letters in Septemeber were ConAgra, Chuck E Cheese and Yum! Brands. These five companies were asked to provide guidance on what measures they plan to implement, and their timelines for doing so.

The letters followed the establishment of the Council of Better Business Bureau’s (CBBB) Children’s Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative, which was set up last year as a voluntary self-regulation program for industry. Participants adopted nutrition standards for all marketing aimed at children, and also committed to devote at least half of their kids’ advertising to promote healthier products, good nutrition and healthy lifestyles.

ConAgra earlier this month responded to Chariman Markey, announcing that it would join the initiative.

This is now made up of 13 participants: Cadbury Schweppes, Campbell Soup, Coca-Cola, General Mills, Hershey, Kellogg, Kraft, McDonald’s, PepsiCo, Unilever, Masterfoods, Burger King, and ConAgra.

Out of the other remaining companies contacted last month, Chuck E Cheese agreed to join the CBBB initiative in part, while Yum! Brands declined.

Chairman Markey yesterday published a statement declaring that Nestle, Dannon and Yum! Brands have been “slow to act”.

“At a time when our country is facing a serious childhood obesity crisis, the responses from these companies raises the question of whether voluntary industry action will be sufficient to combat this important public health issue,” he said.

Indeed, there have long been signs that if the food industry as a whole fails to adequately step up to the issue with voluntary measures, it is highly likely that new regulations will be implemented to enforce advertising restrictions.

According to American law, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has three major ways it could address the problem: it could place a ban on all junk food ads; it could limit the overall advertising minutes available for advertising to children; or it could disqualify broadcasters from renewing their licenses if children’s programs are aired with junk food ads.

In June Chairman Markey chaired a hearing in the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet, during which he said that in the absence of a proper response from industry, he is prepared to “press the FCC to put on the books rules that will protect the children of our country from these unhealthy messages”.

“The fact that Dannon, Nestlé, and Yum! Brands are unwilling to restrict marketing to kids is disappointing, given that 13 of their competitors have found that it is possible to act in a socially responsible manner without harming their bottom line,” said Chairman Markey yesterday.

In their response letters, the three companies all highlighted their individual efforts to provide healthy options to children. Dannon said it “has not made at this time a decision as to whether or not it will join the CBBB initiative”, while Nestle stated “this is a complex issue and, as a global company, Nestle is currently evaluating our internal children’s advertising standards around the world. This process will be completed in 2008.”