Addressing Food Insecurity in Higher Education: Creating an Integrated & Sustainable Food Pantry

Last updated March 25, 2019

Addressing Food Insecurity in Higher Education: Creating an Integrated & Sustainable Food Pantry

Last updated March 25, 2019

Learn how to improve the impact of the food pantry initiative on your campus.

Overview

According to recent studies, up to half of college students battle with food insecurity, which researchers have linked to lower graduation rates. It is increasingly common for colleges and universities to establish a food pantry to help address food insecurity among students, but many pantries are not well-integrated with campus and community partners. To positively impact the lives of more students, schools can centralize and expand upon what they are already doing.

Join us for a webcast where we will explore an exceptionally well-integrated food pantry model from UMass Lowell. You will learn how staff forged strong relationships with on- and off-campus partners to:

  • Generate incremental funds
  • Raise visibility for the initiative
  • Position it as a central focal point of the university’s holistic efforts to address food insecurity on campus

You will leave this training with strategies to work more closely with your own campus and community partners to either create a new food pantry or increase the impact and sustainability of your existing one.

Who should attend?

This training is designed for those who currently oversee or champion a food pantry on their own campus. Institutions that are looking to establish a food pantry for the first time will benefit from this training, as will those who have a food pantry in place but want to learn how to better integrate it with the broader campus and community.

Agenda

In this webcast, our speaker, Annie Ciaraldi will use UMass Lowell’s case study to discuss how you can leverage successful partnerships with campus and community partners to:

  1. Gain buy-in from university leadership
  2. Assess student needs
  3. Fundraise both on- and off-campus
  4. Raise visibility for the food pantry
  5. Scale up and expand efforts around food insecurity beyond the food pantry