
No.  8 
+,!-I 
A 
PUBLICA~ON  FOR  CEILD  NUTIWION  PROFESSIONALS  FROM  TEE NATIONAL  FOOD  SFBVICE  MANAGEMEW  hkmrum 
RESEARCH 
CNP’s  today  are  much  different  from  those  of 1946  when  the  school  lunch  program 
was  first  federally  funded.  The  primary  customer  has  shifted  from  parents  and 
administrators  to  students.  Students  today  are  more  sophisticated  and  are  exposed  at 
an  earlier  age  to  a  variety  of types of food.  They  grew  up  in  an  environment  of fast 
food  restaurants  and  food  courts.  Choices  have  become  the  norm  rather  than  the 
exception.  To  keep  pace  with  the  changing  market,  school  foodservices  must 
continuously  adjust  to  the  wants  and  needs  of  the  customer.  This  involves 
continuously  asking  the  students  such  questions  as “How  happy  are  you  with  the 
school  foodservice  and  nutrition  program?“,  “What  one  thing  do  you  like  best  about 
your  school  foodservice  and  nutrition  program  that  you  would  never  change?”  and 
“If you  could  change  one  thing  about  your  school  foodservice  and  nutrition  program, 
what  would  it be?“. 
SFS  director/supervisors  wear  many  hats  in  the  work  environment  of today. 
The  development  of continuous  improvement  tools  is  very  time  consuming. 
The  development  of a  valid  and  reliable  student  foodservice  survey  is  a  multi  step 
process.  Many  SFS directors/supervisors  do  not  have  time  in  their  busy schedules  to 
develop  such  an  instrument.  As  a  result,  the  National  Food  Service  Management 
Institute  (NFSMI),  Division  of Applied  Research  has  begun  a  multi  phase  project 
to  develop  student  foodservice  surveys.  The  first  to  be  developed  was  the  high 
school  survey. 
OBJECTIVES 
l 
To  determine  whether  the  same survey could  be  used  for  high  and 
middle/junior  high  school  students. 
l 
To  determine  if student  satisfaction  is related  to participation  in  high 
school  foodservices. 
METHOD 
It is  important  in  applied  research  and  continuous  improvement  to  focus  on  the 
customer.  To  ensure  a  student  focused  survey  was  developed,  the  Division  of 
Applied  Research  began  by asking  a  group  of  high  school  students  to  discuss 
“What  characteristics  contributed  to  an  ‘ideal’  school  cafeteria.”  Students  ranked 
fresh  clean  food  as the  most  important;  second  as a  clean  cafeteria,  and  tied  for 
third  were:  nice  staff, no  long  lines  and  good  variety.  The  student  identified 
characteristics  were  the  basis  for  the  development  of survey  questions.  The  first 
pilot  survey was  composed  of ninety  questions.  This  survey  was  tested  with  150 
high  school  students  from  selected  districts  in  Wisconsin,  Mississippi,  and 
Massachusetts  and  150  middle/junior  high  students  from  selected  districts  in 
California,  Wisconsin,  Massachusetts,  and  Mississippi.  Statistical  analysis  showed 
a  significant  difference  in  the  characteristics  important  to  middle/junior  high 
students  and  those  important  to high  school  students. 
One  unique  difference  in  middle/junior  high  students  was  the  direct  relationship 
between  satisfaction  and  sitting  with  their  friends.  This  relationship  is probably 
because  in  many  middle/junior  high  schools  students  frequently  sit  with  a 
scheduled  class rather  than  having  open  seating  that  allows  them  to  sit with  their 
friends.  As  a  result,  it  was  decided  there  was  enough  difference  between 
middle/junior  high  and  high  school  students  to  develop  a  separate 
middle/junior  high  school  survey.  The  middle/junior  high  survey  is  in  the 
development  stage.