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    COOKING WITH PURPOSE: A COMPREHENSIVE FEASIBILITY AND SCALABILITY ASSESSMENT USING LARGE-LANGUAGE-MODEL-ASSISTED EVALUATION

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    Author
    Stipho, Fawaz Bashar
    Issue Date
    2025
    Keywords
    culinary education
    food desert
    GPT-4
    implementation science
    nutrition intervention
    Advisor
    Chuffe, Eliud
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Publisher
    The University of Arizona.
    Rights
    Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author.
    Abstract
    Background: Youth in South-side Tucson, a designated food desert, experience elevated rates of hypertension, type 2 diabetes, and obesity. ‘Cooking with Purpose' is a culinary education program designed to equip participants with practical cooking skills and nutritional literacy. Objective: To evaluate the feasibility and potential scalability of the pilot program using a large-language-model (LLM) pipeline that converts qualitative feedback into quantitative metrics. Methods: Twenty participants (aged 6-20) completed three 90-minute sessions delivered bi-weekly at a public library. Pre- and post- questionnaires (2-3 items each, Likert + open-ended) captured engagement, satisfaction, and behavior-change intent. GPT-4 (temperature 0.0) scored free-text responses on a 1-5 rubric. Nested averaging aggregated item-level scores to participant-level and cohort-level means. Feasibility criteria were ≥80 % completion, post-program satisfaction ≥4.0, and behavior-change intent ≥4.0. Results: All 20 enrolled youths completed every session (100% retention). Post-program satisfaction averaged 4.6±0.5, and GPT-4-derived behavior-change intent averaged 4.2±0.6, surpassing feasibility thresholds. Automated scoring processed all surveys in 5 min (<15 s per participant). Conclusions: High retention and strong engagement indicate that ‘Cooking with Purpose' is feasible for underserved youth. The LLM-powered evaluation pipeline markedly reduces analytic burden, supporting cost-efficient scale-up. Longer-term follow-up and multi-site trials are warranted.
    Type
    Electronic Thesis
    text
    Degree Name
    Minor
    Degree Level
    bachelors
    Degree Program
    Spanish
    Honors College
    Degree Grantor
    University of Arizona
    Collections
    Honors Theses

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