Mississippi
The Mississippi Department of Education receives funding from CDC’s Division of Adolescent and School Health to
- Conduct the Youth Risk Behavior Survey.
- Implement effective policies, programs, and practices to avoid, prevent, and reduce
sexual risk behaviors among students that contribute to HIV infection,
sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), and pregnancy.
- Promote coordinated school health policies, programs, and practices with an emphasis on physical activity, nutrition, and tobacco use prevention.
Facts and Figures for Mississippi
Youth Risk Behavior Survey
Youth Online: Interactive Data for Mississippi
School Health Profiles
School Health Policies and Practices Study
HIV, STD, and Unintended Pregnancy Prevention |
Mississippi is seeking to increase the percentage of schools
that provide parents and families health information to increase parent and family knowledge
of HIV prevention, STD prevention, and teen pregnancy prevention.
Activities
- Partner with at least one community-based organization to develop trainings
for parents in high-priority school districts on evidence-based HIV, STD, and teen
pregnancy prevention programs and activities.
- Conduct a minimum of two trainings for parents on evidence-based HIV, STD, and
teen pregnancy prevention programs and activities.
- Create a pamphlet to connect parents with HIV, STD, and teen pregnancy prevention
resources in partnership with the Mississippi Department of Health and community-based
organizations.
- Invite student representatives to join the HIV Materials Review Panel to assist in
reviewing HIV-related materials for students and families.
Status
 |
Percentage of secondary schools that provide parents and families
health information to increase parent and family knowledge of HIV, STD, or teen pregnancy
prevention
Table
[pdf 4.2M] |
Map† [ppt] |
Mississippi is seeking to increase the percentage of schools in which the
lead health education teacher received professional development on at least
six of the following during the past 2 years:
- Teaching HIV prevention to students with physical, medical, or
cognitive disabilities.
- Teaching HIV prevention to students of various cultural backgrounds.
- Using interactive teaching methods for HIV prevention education,
such as role plays or cooperative group activities.
- Teaching essential skills for health behavior change related to HIV
prevention and guiding student practice of these skills.
- Teaching about health-promoting social norms and beliefs related to
HIV prevention.
- Strategies for involving parents, families, and others in student
learning of HIV prevention education.
- Assessing students’ performance in HIV prevention education.
- Implementing standards-based HIV prevention education curricula and student
assessment.
- Using technology to improve HIV prevention education instruction.
- Teaching HIV prevention to students with limited English
proficiency.
- Addressing community concerns and challenges related to HIV prevention
education.
Activities
- Provide three professional development opportunities for health education
teachers in areas with greater health disparities to increase teachers’ comfort
level with issues related to HIV, STD, and teen pregnancy prevention.
- Develop at least three online standards-based Health Education Assessment
Project trainings (HEAP) for educators on providing quality HIV prevention education
through skills-based instruction.
- Provide a HEAP of Books training for teachers.
Status
 |
Percentage of secondary schools in which the lead health education
teacher received professional development during the 2 years before the survey on at least
6 of 11 key HIV prevention topics
Table [pdf
4.2M] |
Map† [ppt] |
Mississippi is seeking to increase the percentage of schools that have a
policy or policies that address all of the following issues:
- Attendance of students with HIV infection.
- Procedures to protect HIV-infected students and staff from discrimination.
- Maintaining confidentiality of HIV-infected students and staff.
Activities
- Develop and deliver communicable diseases and related policy development training.
- Provide 10 mini-grants to secondary schools to develop comprehensive communicable
disease policies.
- Provide technical assistance to secondary schools on the development of
communicable disease policies.
Status
 |
Percentage of secondary schools with a policy on students or staff who
have HIV infection or AIDS that addresses attendance of students with HIV infection,
protection from discrimination, and
confidentiality
Table [pdf
4.2M] |
Map† [ppt] |
|
|
Physical Activity, Nutrition, and Tobacco (PANT) |
Physical Activity
Mississippi is seeking to increase the percentage of schools in which at least
one physical education teacher or specialist received professional
development on physical education during the past 2 years.
Activities
- Provide standards-based professional development and training on lifetime
physical activity strategies and physical education to teachers in high-disparity
school districts.
- Collect Fitnessgram data from 12 schools who received Fitnessgram training and
physical education mini-grants.
- Make mini-grants available to purchase resources and strategies from Fitnessgram
trainings.
Status
 |
Percentage of secondary schools in which at least one physical education teacher or
specialist received professional development on physical education during the 2 years
before the survey
Table [pdf
4.2M] |
Map† [ppt] |
Nutrition
Mississippi is seeking to increase the percentage of schools in
which the lead health education teacher received professional development on nutrition
education and dietary behavior during the past 2 years.
Activities
- Provide standards-based, assessment-driven professional development to all
stakeholders invested in nutrition education—school nurses, school food service staff,
health education teachers, physical education teachers, parents, administrators, etc.
- Provide marketing resources and trainings on making attractive and appealing meals
for students.
- Partner with the Mississippi School Nutrition Association to ensure that food
service staff receives professional development on coordinated school health and the
role of nutrition within the classroom.
Status
 |
Percentage of secondary schools in which the lead health education teacher received
professional development during the 2 years before the survey on nutrition and dietary behavior
Table [pdf
4.2M] |
Map† [ppt] |
Tobacco
Mississippi is seeking to increase the percentage of schools that implement
a tobacco-use prevention policy in all of the following ways:
- Provide visible signage.
- Communicate the policy to students, staff, and visitors.
- Designate an individual responsible for enforcement.
- Have a process in place for addressing violations.
- Use remedial rather than punitive sanctions for violators.
- Tailor consequences to the severity and frequency of the violation.
- Communicate student violations to their parents and families.
Activities
- Partner with the Office of Tobacco Control, the Partnership for Healthy
Mississippi, and the Mississippi Lung Association to ensure that schools have
adequate resources to communicate the no-tobacco policy in their schools.
- Serve at a state-level youth anti-tobacco leadership conference each year to
support the Partnership for Healthy Mississippi in educating youth and promoting
advocacy against the use of tobacco.
- Provide professional development to teachers and school nurses on educating
students about the harmful effects of tobacco use.
Status
 |
Percentage of secondary schools that implement a tobacco-free environment policy addressing seven key elements
Table [pdf
4.2M] |
Map† [ppt] |
|
|
Coordinated School Health |
Mississippi is seeking to increase the percentage of schools that have a
group (e.g., school health team) that helps plan and implement school health
programs, with representation from 10 or more of the following:
- School administrators.
- Health education teachers.
- Physical education teachers.
- Mental health or social services staff.
- Nutrition or food service staff.
- Health services staff (e.g., school nurse).
- Maintenance and transportation staff.
- Student body.
- Parents or families of students.
- Community.
- Local health departments, agencies, or organizations.
- Faith-based organizations.
- Businesses.
- Local government.
Activities
- Sponsor trainings on establishing school health advisory teams for higher education faculty.
- Distribute a coordinated school health toolkit to all schools to assist in the
implementation of school health programs.
- Honor a local school health council for their active involvement in coordinated
school health and award the council with a new Healthy School Board Toolkit and the
2011 Mississippi Health School Board award.
Status
 |
Percentage of secondary schools that had one or more groups (e.g., a school
health council, committee, or team) that offers guidance on the development
of policies or coordinates activities on health topics
Table [pdf
4.2M] |
Map† [ppt] |
Mississippi is seeking to increase the percentage of schools that have ever
assessed their policies, activities, and programs by using the School Health
Index or a similar self-assessment tool in any of the following areas:
- Physical activity.
- Nutrition.
- Tobacco-use prevention.
Activities
- Provide School Health Index trainings to school health councils to assess their
school health needs.
- Require each school to complete a school health needs assessment as part of the
Healthy Students Act of 2007.
- Provide technical assistance and follow-up support to schools for noncompliance
with the Healthy Students Act and completion of policy grant benchmarks.
- Provide policy development mini-grants that require the completion of the
School Health Index prior to selecting their policy focus.
Status
 |
Percentage of secondary schools that ever used the School Health Index or other
self-assessment tool to assess their policies, activities, and programs in physical
activity, nutrition, or tobacco-use prevention
Table [pdf
4.2M] |
Map† [ppt] |
Mississippi is seeking to increase the percentage of schools that
provide parents and families health information to increase parent and family knowledge of
any of the following health issues:
- Tobacco-use prevention.
- Physical activity.
- Nutrition and healthy eating.
Activities
- Create a new “healthy school” district-level report card linked with district-level
academic achievement reports. Share online report card with parents, teachers, and other
school staff.
- Host a professional development for parents, parent liaisons, school counselors,
and Parent/Teacher Association presidents on how to coordinate and sustain parental
involvement in school districts in disparate areas.
- Support legislation that requires all schools to participate in the HealthierUS
School Challenge and work with schools to report their status on their school Web sites.
Status
 |
Percentage of secondary schools that provided parents and families health information to
increase parent and family knowledge of tobacco-use prevention, physical activity, or
nutrition and healthy eating
Table [pdf
4.2M] |
Map† [ppt] |
|
|
† The complete PowerPoint and PDF documents are found
here. The PowerPoint documents range in size from 200-230K.