Details
- Farm-to-School: Sowing Seeds for a Sustainable Future
Farm-to-School (FTS) programs have expanded rapidly since the 2010 Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act (HHFKA), now encompassing 74% of School Food Authorities nationwide. Despite widespread adoption, questions remain regarding the long-term efficacy of FTS programs in creating sustained behavioral changes among student participants and the broader impact on school communities.
This study examines the effectiveness of FTS programs across multiple domains, including student outcomes, community impacts, and financial implications, through a comprehensive literature review and case study analysis of five top urban FTS programs across diverse geographic and cultural contexts. A deeper examination of the Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD) FTS program through Sustainability SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats) analysis, informs strategic recommendations. FTS programs demonstrate measurable positive effects on student nutrition knowledge, fruit and vegetable consumption, and social-emotional learning outcomes. However, sustainability challenges persist, including insufficient staffing capacity (45% of programs), funding limitations (42%), and higher local procurement costs (38%). While FTS programs effectively achieve stated objectives, long-term sustainability requires comprehensive strategic frameworks addressing financial diversification, operational excellence, community partnerships, policy advocacy, and infrastructure development.
- Hargis, Matt (Author)
- Merrigan, Kathleen (Kathleen Ann), 1959- (Degree committee member)
- Arizona State University. School of Sustainability (Degree granting institution)
- Food Systems — Farm-to-school/school and community gardens
- Cohort year 2023
- "A capstone presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Science in Sustainable Food Systems"
- date"Approved 11 August 2025 by Dr. Kathleen Merrigan"