Impact & Reach

Impact & Reach

 

Evaluations

University of Melbourne, 2019, What’s Cooking? Evaluation of the long‐term impacts of the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Program.
An evaluation of the longer‐term influence of the Kitchen Garden Program by comparing the cooking, eating and gardening attitudes and behaviours of young adults who had participated in the program in primary school with those who had not undertaken the program. 
View complete evaluation of long-term impact 

University of Wollongong, 2013, Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden National Program Evaluation: Final Report.
An evaluation of the process, impact and outcomes of the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden National Program, rolled out to 190 government primary schools across Australia in 2008.
View complete national evaluation report

McCaughey VicHealth Centre for Community Wellbeing, University of Melbourne and Deakin University, 2009, Evaluation of the Stephanie Alexander Kitchen Garden Program.
A mixed-methods longitudinal evaluation of the Kitchen Garden Program in collaboration with the Kitchen Garden Foundation as well as twelve participating primary schools throughout Victoria over two and a half years. 
View complete state evaluation report

Our evidence-based approach

The Kitchen Garden Program supports many of the global principles for sustainable and healthy living from the United Nations (UN) and the World Health Organization (WHO). These include the WHO’s Health Promoting Schools approach and at least six of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

Reach

The Kitchen Garden Program is affordable, accessible and culturally relevant for all schools and services, including those that are remote, regional, urban, linguistically diverse, Aboriginal-led, small and large.

 

View the map to find schools and services delivering pleasurable food education

We are continuously growing and will not be satisfied until every child and young person in Australia can experience the Kitchen Garden Program.

In 2020, we expanded the Kitchen Garden Program beyond the primary school setting and now offer a continuum of pleasurable food education. In February 2020, the Foundation launched the Kitchen Garden Program for Early Childhood. This program is the first of its kind for preschool-aged children in Australia. More information on the three-year early childhood pilot and the Foundation’s work in the sector can be found in this infographic summary.

In November 2020, the Foundation launched the Kitchen Garden Program for Secondary Years, a groundbreaking, curriculum-integrated food education initiative, based on demand from the kitchen garden community. See our evaluation summary of the three-year secondary years pilot project in this infographic summary.

Would you like to support our work? There are so many ways you can help ensure Australian children and young people form positive food habits for life.

SUPPORT US

 

Video credit: Building Healthy People showcases the impact of kitchen garden programs on schools and communities. It was created in 2021 by Masters of Dietetics students from Monash University, hosted by the Foundation for a seven-week work placement. Read more about the placement here.

Promo