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. Identify collaborative strategies to develop and implement change in relation to physical activities and healthy eating
Table of Contents
This guide ‘5532 a-day’ is produced by the British Nutrition Foundation and is a guide to feeding children a healthy, varied and balanced diet to give them all they need to grow and be healthy.
Table of Contents
Tutorial Video
Reading Materials
'Childhood obesity: a plan for action’ from GOV.UK
'Physical activity guidelines for children (under 5 years)’ from the NHS
'Early years high impact area 4: Healthy weight, healthy nutrition. Health visitors leading to the Healthy Child Programme’ from the Department of Health and Social Care and Public Health England
Presentation
Good Practice Example
Interactive Quiz
Evidence Opportunities
Extended Learning
Visit the Better Health Healthier Families website to read more ‘Easy ways to eat well and move more'.
‘Nutrition matters for the Early Years: Guidance for feeding under fives in the childcare setting’ from Northern Ireland’s Public Health Agency.
This guide ‘5532 a-day’ is produced by the British Nutrition Foundation and is a guide to feeding children a healthy, varied and balanced diet to give them all they need to grow and be healthy.
Action for Children has produced this document ‘Eat better, start better: Guide to the Voluntary Food and Drink Guidelines for Early Years Settings in England’.
The NHS Eatwell Guide shows how much of what we eat overall should come from each food group to achieve a healthy, balanced diet. You do not need to achieve this balance with every meal, but try to get the balance right over a day or even a week.
Click to read the ‘Statutory framework for the early years foundation stage: Setting the standards for learning, development and care for children from birth to five’. The safeguarding and welfare requirements include food, drink and activity provision.
This section of the NHS website gived information for parents about ‘Advice for parents of healthy-weight children’.
This second section of the NHS website looks at some of the ‘Benefits of exercise’.
Think And Challenge