Children's Defense Fund Approach statement: Fictional children's advocacy group Fictional children's advocacy group The purpose of our childhood advocacy group is to raise awareness about poor and low-income children who are suffering from obesity and the physical and psychological risks associated with obesity. The group will focus both on proactive...
Children's Defense Fund Approach statement: Fictional children's advocacy group Fictional children's advocacy group The purpose of our childhood advocacy group is to raise awareness about poor and low-income children who are suffering from obesity and the physical and psychological risks associated with obesity. The group will focus both on proactive strategies, as well as advocate for more regulation, in support of legal initiatives that will reduce children's calorie intake and improve the types of food that they eat at school.
Proactive strategies will include more nutrition education, increased access to parks and recreational facilities, and expanded physical education programs. Legislative actions include prohibiting the use of fast food and sugary foods in schools, including in cafeterias, vending machines, and as part of promotional agreements between school activity groups and companies that promote unhealthy foods. According to a recent study in the American Journal of Public Health, even when controlled for income, children who attend schools within a half-mile of fast food restaurants are more likely to be obese.
Lobbying federal, state, and local legislatures (as well as school boards) to limit children's exposure to an obesegenic environment at school will be a core component of the group's activities. Fundraising will also be a critical aspect of our group. Programs such as Alice Waters' Edible Schoolyard -- a school garden in a low-income area designed to help feed the student body through its bounty, as well as teach students about healthy nutrition and a non-corporate food culture through gardening -- will be financially supported by the organization.
Working with local organizations will be a core component of the group, as we believe that every child is an individual and that an individualized approach to obesity-reduction is often the most effective one. Students in rural areas, for example, may lack transportation to supermarkets at home, and rely upon unhealthy, mass-produced food as a result. Children in urban areas may lack support for physical education, because of the absence of safe places to play in their environments.
While the contributing factors to obesity may be the same -- too many calories and not enough physical activity -- the reasons that an activity and caloric balance occurs must be addressed locally, and not in a generic fashion. Timeline Within six months: Raise awareness about the organization. Contact local, state, and national leaders. Touch base with leaders who are sympathetic to the goals of the organization.
Disseminating the message of obesity reduction through public service messages as well as replicating existing programs and advocacy messages will be part of the organization's efforts to make connections with sympathetic leaders. Within a year: Research and target critical programs and initiatives that will become the focus of fundraising of the organization.
Ongoing, but within a year to six months to generate support for the first bill: Create a list of legal initiatives for the organization to support, such as limiting the miles a fast food restaurant can be built near a school. Ongoing: Solicit donations.
The remaining sections cover Conclusions. Subscribe for $1 to unlock the full paper, plus 130,000+ paper examples and the PaperDue AI writing assistant — all included.
Always verify citation format against your institution's current style guide.