Date of Award

2025

Degree Type

Open Access Dissertation

Degree Name

Education, PhD

Program

School of Educational Studies

Advisor/Supervisor/Committee Chair

Gwen Garrison

Dissertation or Thesis Committee Member

Deborah Faye Carter

Dissertation or Thesis Committee Member

David Drew

Terms of Use & License Information

Terms of Use for work posted in Scholarship@Claremont.

Rights Information

© 2025 Kianna D.G. Valoa

Keywords

campus food pantry, cognitive barriers, food insecurity, intervention, postcard

Subject Categories

Education

Abstract

Estimates of student food insecurity at California’s public universities range from 42–47%. This study conducted at a public university in California investigated the impacts of an intervention on increasing campus food pantry use by increasing students’ knowledge of the pantry and reducing cognitive barriers. A sample of enrolled students (N=11,400) were randomly assigned to be in either the partial intervention (n=3,800), full intervention (n=3,800), or control (n=3,800) group. The partial intervention group received a postcard in the mail and an email invitation to complete the post-test survey online. The full intervention group received the pretest survey, a postcard, and the post-test survey. The surveys evaluated students’ knowledge and perceptions of the prevalence of food insecurity, who the food pantry is meant to serve, the normalcy and acceptability of food insecurity, and pantry design aspects. The average survey response rate was 5.3%. An analysis of the survey responses from the three groups revealed no statistically significant differences in students’ self-reported pantry visits, knowledge, and perceptions. Similarly, an analysis of weekly pantry visitors over the academic term revealed no changes in pantry use. An interview with campus food pantry staff discussing the findings led to the evaluative decision that using postcards alone is an ineffective way to increase campus food pantry use. Future inquiries should explore the effectiveness of other communication mediums such as texts, emails, and letters alone and in combination with postcards—especially interventions co-designed with students. Other approaches to improving pantry visibility should also be explored.

ISBN

9798290969336

Included in

Education Commons

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