Units. More than Sweet. Purpose. Supplies/Equipment Needed. Time Needed. Get Fit 4 Life

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Unit Is the Glass 1/2 Full or 1/2 Empty Get Fit 4 Life Units Fit for Life Is Your Plate Loaded? Purpose Participants will be able to: Read Nutrition Fact labels to be aware of the volume of nutrition, food energy (or calories), sugar, and other substances in liquids they choose to eat. Use food labels to make informed and healthy food choices. Determine the amount of sugar in common beverages. Supplies/Equipment Needed Variety of popular drinks in their original container (Gatorade, soft drink, juice, milk, energy drink, tea, water, Kool-aid, pouch drink, juice box, lemonade, etc.) Option 1 Test tubes labeled and filled with the amount of sugar contained in the popular drinks selected for the activity. Option 2 When possible empty, clean and completely dry a duplicate drink container, same as those (Continued on page 2) How Much is Too Much What's Up with the Label Is the Glass 1/2 Identify Full or 1/2 healthier alternatives empty Move it or Loose for it? beverages. Dump the Plump A Walking Water Bottle Game On! (fitness activity supplement More than Sweet Natural and refined sugars are not metabolized the same way. Your body can more easily break down natural sugars and turn them into energy. Sugar = Carbs = Energy. Refined sugar is harder for your body to process and uses it as a last resort for energy. So if you aren't working out and using up all the calories you took in for the day, that refined sugar is going to sit there and stay on your hips, thighs and or stomach. Time Needed One on 15 One minutes Group 30-45 Setting minutes

Get Fit 4 Life Page 2 Unit Is the Glass 1/2 Full or 1/2 Empty Activity 1. Introduce/review the food label and how to read it to participant. Refer to What s Up With the Label lesson. Before you Start Review http:// www.fda.gov/food/ ResourcesForYou/ Consumers/NFLPM/ ucm274593.htm before leading this unit. 2. Hand the participant worksheet, pencil and a popular drink to each participant. Let them fill out the worksheet, supplying help only when necessary. 3. When they are through talk them through the Process/Evaluation and then pull out the test tube/ bottle containing the granulated sugar so they can actually see how much sugar is in the drink. Supplies/Equipment continued Get fit 4 life station The station for this lesson is about sugar in drinks. Display the sample drinks, empty drink containers with sugar, and test tubes with sugar in the Get Fit 4 Life Equipment/ Supply Kit on a table. Copy page 5 in this lesson or use laminated copies provided in the kit. Copy page 6 and place on the table (a laminated copy is in the kit). filled with the original product. Pre-measure the amount of sugar the original product contains and place in the bottle with the cap securely in place. Multiple copies of worksheet Think What You Drink and Nutrition Label run front to back on cardstock and laminated. Laminated Poster(s) of a food label and its parts Dry erase marker Dry erase cleaner and cloth Bag of marbles (one for each team) 2 5 gallon buckets or tubs Water Small plastic bowl or tub

Unit Is the Glass 1/2 Full or 1/2 Empty Get Fit 4 Life Recreation Equipment/Supplies: Marble Madness Page 3 Bag of marbles (one for each team) Two 5 gallon buckets or tubs Water 2 Small plastic bowl or tub Participants should remove socks and shoes. If they have on pants, roll pant leg up above the knee, if possible. Two Towels (beach or bath) Instructions: 1. Before beginning this activity, have participants go through the stretching exercises in What s Up with the Label lesson. This will help lessen the chance of toe or foot cramps during the activity. 2. Fill buckets approximately 1/4 full of water. 3. Place the two buckets approximately 20 feet from the start line. Place the small plastic bowls at the second corner of the triangle, as shown in the diagram below. 4. Divide participants into two teams. Give a marble to each participant. Have the participants place their marble in the team s bucket and then return to the starting line and form a single file line behind the start line and facing their water Oklahoma State University, in compliance with Title VI and VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Executive Order 11246 as amended, Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, and other federal laws and regulations, does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, gender, age, religion, disability, or status as a veteran in any of its policies, practices or procedures. This includes but is not limited to admissions, employment, financial aid, and educational services. Issued in furtherance of Cooperative Extension work, acts of May 8 and June 30, 1914, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Sam E. Curl, Director of Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma. This publication is printed and issued by Oklahoma State University as authorized by the Dean of the Division of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources and has been prepared and distributed at a cost of $0.000 for 000 copies."

Get Fit 4 Life Page 4 Unit Is the Glass 1/2 Full or 1/2 Empty Recreation - continued bucket. Place a towel on the floor at the water bucket for safety. 5. One team member at a time, the participant will bear crawl down to the bucket, stand up, place their foot in the water bucket, grab one marble with their toes, lift out their foot and carry the marble to the small bowl with their toes. They will drop the marble in the bowl. They then re-assume the bear crawl position and crawl back to the start line to tag the next player. 6. Repeat the course until all team members have had a turn and there are no marbles left in the water bucket. If a team member drops their marble between the water bucket and the small bowl, they must return the marble to the water bucket and get at the end of their team s line. They will go again when it is their turn. Cooperative effort of Process/Evaluation Questions you might ask... Were you surprised with how much sugar was in the popular drink? What makes milk and 100% juice better choices? (Even though these both have some sugar in them, the sugar is natural. Sugar in sodas, is refined (added) sugar.) Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service 4-H Youth Development 205 4-H Youth Development Bldg Stillwater, OK 74078-6064 Phone: 405-744-8891 Fax: 405-744-6522 http://oklahoma4h.okstate.edu/ How often did you find that a drink contained more than one serving? Would you change the amount of food you eat or drink because of the number of servings listed? References Get Moving, Get Healthy developed by 4-H Youth Development, Rutgers Cooperative Extension,. 2011.

Half Full or Half Empty Get Fit 4 Life 1. Fill in the nutrition information from the label on your drink. 2. Use the following formula to find out how many teaspoons of sugar are in one serving of the drink. divided by 4 = Grams of sugar in a serving Teaspoons of sugar in a serving 3. What is the total number of teaspoons of sugar in the drink? X = Teaspoons of sugar in a serving Number of serving in the container Total # teaspoon of sugar in container 4. Even if the beverage has 0 grams of sugar, check to see if it has any of the words listed below. Circle any of the words that are included in the ingredients. Added Sugars Brown sugar Corn sweetener Corn syrup Dextrose Fructose Fruit juice concentrates Glucose Highfructose corn syrup Honey Invert sugar Lactose Maltose Malt syrup Molasses Raw sugar Sucrose Sugar Syrup Artificial Sweeteners Aspartame (NutraSweet, Equal ) Saccharin (Sweet N Low, Sugar Twin ) Sucralose (Spenda ) Acesulfame potassium (Sweet One, Sunett ) If the drink has sugar, but does not contain any of these words, it has Natural Sugar Oklahoma 4-H Youth Development

Get Fit 4 Life Half Full or Half Empty CHOOSE A BEVERAGE FROM THE TABLE. REVIEW THE NUTRITION FACTS LABEL ON THE BEVER- AGE. COMPLETE THE WORKSHEET TO LEARN ABOUT THE SUGAR AND NUTRIENT CONTENT OF THE DRINK. IS THE BEVERAGE A WISE CHOICE FOR A HEALTHY DRINK? Cooperative effort of