Published
16 Oct 2025

Local School Wellness Policy – Triennial Assessment

1. Introduction

In accordance with federal requirements, Syringa Mountain School conducts a triennial assessment of its Wellness Policy to measure implementation, compliance, and progress toward achieving wellness goals. This report summarizes findings from the most recent review cycle.


2. Policy Compliance

Policy Availability: The Wellness Policy is publicly available on the Syringa Mountain School website and accessible to families upon request.

Stakeholder Involvement: Input was sought from parents, staff, students, administrators, and community members through surveys and Parent Council meetings.

Compliance Findings:

Policy is in alignment with USDA requirements.

Annual review processes are in place, but documentation of some activities needs strengthening.


3. Progress Toward Goals

Nutrition Promotion & Education

Students receive nutrition education through Farm & Garden Science classes and hands-on projects such as outdoor gardens and the hydroponic tower garden.

Fresh fruits and vegetables are provided as healthy snack options, especially for students from low-income households, given Syringa does not operate a school lunch program.

Physical Activity

Students participate in daily outdoor recess and seasonal outdoor education (Carbonate Hike, Wagon Ho, ski days, etc.).

Movement and mindfulness are embedded throughout the day in line with Waldorf-inspired practices.

School-Based Activities

Parent Council helps coordinate festivals and events that include healthy foods and promote wellness (Harvest Festival, MayFaire).

Community partnerships support enrichment (local farms, Mountain Rides bus passes).


4. Evaluation of Implementation

Strengths:

Strong integration of farm and garden science.

Commitment to experiential, nature-based learning that embeds wellness into daily routines.

Active parent and community involvement.

Areas for Growth:

Need for more structured nutrition education lessons tied to Idaho health standards.

Expansion of access to healthy snacks, especially during testing weeks and festivals.

More documentation of how physical activity minutes align with state recommendations.


5. Next Steps & Action Plan

Develop a Wellness Committee that meets at least twice per year.

Create a more formal system to document nutrition education lessons across grade levels.

Increase student input in wellness initiatives through classroom councils or surveys.

Plan for the next triennial assessment in 2028, ensuring data collection occurs annually for easier reporting.


6. Public Notification

This Triennial Assessment will be shared on the Syringa Mountain School website and made available in print upon request.