An ecological study of food desert prevalence and 4th grade academic achievement in New York State school districts

<p><em>Background</em>. This ecological study examines the relationship between food desert prevalence and academic achievement at the school district level. <br /><em>Design and methods.</em> Sample included 232 suburban and urban school districts in New York Sta...

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Main Author: Seth E. Frndak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2014-12-01
Series:Journal of Public Health Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jphres.org/index.php/jphres/article/view/319
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spelling doaj-ad235dd9c48e4beb9e8a1d227acf5dcf2020-11-24T22:35:23ZengPAGEPress PublicationsJournal of Public Health Research2279-90282279-90362014-12-013310.4081/jphr.2014.31996An ecological study of food desert prevalence and 4th grade academic achievement in New York State school districtsSeth E. Frndak0Graduate School of Education, University at Buffalo-State, University of New York Buffalo, NY<p><em>Background</em>. This ecological study examines the relationship between food desert prevalence and academic achievement at the school district level. <br /><em>Design and methods.</em> Sample included 232 suburban and urban school districts in New York State. Multiple open-source databases were merged to obtain: 4th grade science, English and math scores, school district demographic composition (NYS Report Card), regional socioeconomic indicators (American Community Survey), school district quality (US Common Core of Data), and food desert data (USDA Food Desert Atlas). Multiple regression models assessed the percentage of variation in achievement scores explained by food desert variables, after controlling for additional predictors.<br /><em>Results</em>. The proportion of individuals living in food deserts significantly explained 4th grade achievement scores, after accounting for additional predictors. School districts with higher proportions of individuals living in food desert regions demonstrated lower 4th grade achievement across science, English and math. <em><br />Conclusions</em>. Food deserts appear to be related to academic achievement at the school district level among urban and suburban regions. Further research is needed to better understand how food access is associated with academic achievement at the individual level.</p>http://www.jphres.org/index.php/jphres/article/view/319academic achievement, cognitive development, food desert, food access, nutrition
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seth E. Frndak
spellingShingle Seth E. Frndak
An ecological study of food desert prevalence and 4th grade academic achievement in New York State school districts
Journal of Public Health Research
academic achievement, cognitive development, food desert, food access, nutrition
author_facet Seth E. Frndak
author_sort Seth E. Frndak
title An ecological study of food desert prevalence and 4th grade academic achievement in New York State school districts
title_short An ecological study of food desert prevalence and 4th grade academic achievement in New York State school districts
title_full An ecological study of food desert prevalence and 4th grade academic achievement in New York State school districts
title_fullStr An ecological study of food desert prevalence and 4th grade academic achievement in New York State school districts
title_full_unstemmed An ecological study of food desert prevalence and 4th grade academic achievement in New York State school districts
title_sort ecological study of food desert prevalence and 4th grade academic achievement in new york state school districts
publisher PAGEPress Publications
series Journal of Public Health Research
issn 2279-9028
2279-9036
publishDate 2014-12-01
description <p><em>Background</em>. This ecological study examines the relationship between food desert prevalence and academic achievement at the school district level. <br /><em>Design and methods.</em> Sample included 232 suburban and urban school districts in New York State. Multiple open-source databases were merged to obtain: 4th grade science, English and math scores, school district demographic composition (NYS Report Card), regional socioeconomic indicators (American Community Survey), school district quality (US Common Core of Data), and food desert data (USDA Food Desert Atlas). Multiple regression models assessed the percentage of variation in achievement scores explained by food desert variables, after controlling for additional predictors.<br /><em>Results</em>. The proportion of individuals living in food deserts significantly explained 4th grade achievement scores, after accounting for additional predictors. School districts with higher proportions of individuals living in food desert regions demonstrated lower 4th grade achievement across science, English and math. <em><br />Conclusions</em>. Food deserts appear to be related to academic achievement at the school district level among urban and suburban regions. Further research is needed to better understand how food access is associated with academic achievement at the individual level.</p>
topic academic achievement, cognitive development, food desert, food access, nutrition
url http://www.jphres.org/index.php/jphres/article/view/319
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