Assessing Master Gardener Volunteers’ Involvement in and Knowledge of Food Preservation

Accessing science-based practices for safe-home food preservation (FP) can prevent unnecessary foodborne illness. An Extension program called Grow It, Eat It, Preserve It allows trained Extension agents to teach and advise on FP topics. Meanwhile, the Home & Garden Information Center delivers s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shauna Henley, Jon Traunfeld
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mississippi State University 2021-02-01
Series:Journal of Human Sciences and Extension
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jhseonline.com/article/view/965
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spelling doaj-6b2accc77c3042ada5ee5807d8ca8e0b2021-03-01T23:08:34ZengMississippi State UniversityJournal of Human Sciences and Extension2325-52262021-02-0191Assessing Master Gardener Volunteers’ Involvement in and Knowledge of Food PreservationShauna Henley0Jon Traunfeld1University of Maryland Extension, Baltimore CountyUniversity of Maryland Extension, Home & Garden Information Center Accessing science-based practices for safe-home food preservation (FP) can prevent unnecessary foodborne illness. An Extension program called Grow It, Eat It, Preserve It allows trained Extension agents to teach and advise on FP topics. Meanwhile, the Home & Garden Information Center delivers science-based gardening education, supporting the Master Gardener Volunteer Program (MG), increasing community outreach. MGs conduct the Grow It, Eat It, Preserve It partner program, Grow It Eat It, which teaches residents to grow edible gardens. MGs are not legally trained in FP, and a knowledge gap exists regarding how often MGs are asked FP questions during community events and what resources they provide to clients. An online survey was administered to 1,810 active MGs in Maryland, providing insight on MGs’ current knowledge and community interactions pertaining to FP. A total of 586 MGs responded to the survey. Results indicated that MGs were asked FP questions during community events (65.5%) and often went beyond the scope of their training to provide non-Extension resources for FP. Most MGs were unsure whether FP workshops took place in their county Extension office (65.8%). The survey results can improve cross-programming communication and inform future MG training, marketing, and programming. https://www.jhseonline.com/article/view/965Food PreservationMaster GardenersFamily & Consumer SciencesVolunteers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shauna Henley
Jon Traunfeld
spellingShingle Shauna Henley
Jon Traunfeld
Assessing Master Gardener Volunteers’ Involvement in and Knowledge of Food Preservation
Journal of Human Sciences and Extension
Food Preservation
Master Gardeners
Family & Consumer Sciences
Volunteers
author_facet Shauna Henley
Jon Traunfeld
author_sort Shauna Henley
title Assessing Master Gardener Volunteers’ Involvement in and Knowledge of Food Preservation
title_short Assessing Master Gardener Volunteers’ Involvement in and Knowledge of Food Preservation
title_full Assessing Master Gardener Volunteers’ Involvement in and Knowledge of Food Preservation
title_fullStr Assessing Master Gardener Volunteers’ Involvement in and Knowledge of Food Preservation
title_full_unstemmed Assessing Master Gardener Volunteers’ Involvement in and Knowledge of Food Preservation
title_sort assessing master gardener volunteers’ involvement in and knowledge of food preservation
publisher Mississippi State University
series Journal of Human Sciences and Extension
issn 2325-5226
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Accessing science-based practices for safe-home food preservation (FP) can prevent unnecessary foodborne illness. An Extension program called Grow It, Eat It, Preserve It allows trained Extension agents to teach and advise on FP topics. Meanwhile, the Home & Garden Information Center delivers science-based gardening education, supporting the Master Gardener Volunteer Program (MG), increasing community outreach. MGs conduct the Grow It, Eat It, Preserve It partner program, Grow It Eat It, which teaches residents to grow edible gardens. MGs are not legally trained in FP, and a knowledge gap exists regarding how often MGs are asked FP questions during community events and what resources they provide to clients. An online survey was administered to 1,810 active MGs in Maryland, providing insight on MGs’ current knowledge and community interactions pertaining to FP. A total of 586 MGs responded to the survey. Results indicated that MGs were asked FP questions during community events (65.5%) and often went beyond the scope of their training to provide non-Extension resources for FP. Most MGs were unsure whether FP workshops took place in their county Extension office (65.8%). The survey results can improve cross-programming communication and inform future MG training, marketing, and programming.
topic Food Preservation
Master Gardeners
Family & Consumer Sciences
Volunteers
url https://www.jhseonline.com/article/view/965
work_keys_str_mv AT shaunahenley assessingmastergardenervolunteersinvolvementinandknowledgeoffoodpreservation
AT jontraunfeld assessingmastergardenervolunteersinvolvementinandknowledgeoffoodpreservation
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