Agree. We never even took water bottles. Just a water fountain sip if needed here and there. This shouldn’t be a big deal. Parents complain about everything now. |
| I work in a school with a high FARMs population. Food is a very big deal to many of my students. Don't assume they all have access to a full egg/bacon/whole grain toast/fruit breakfast to fuel them until 1pm. |
Well, the kids likely had breakfast at 6:30 for an 8am start school. Busses come so early! |
Because the way we did things in the past was ideal? I never understand these arguments. |
| I don’t understand. I never had snack time in elementary school growing up. Why do kids need to eat so frequently these days? |
| OP, what is the school’s rationale for no snack? |
Actually, given how pudgy children are today, they should definitely get used to it. |
I’m 45 and we did have snack, at least through 3rd grade. So what does that prove? Whether people who are now adults had snack or didn’t sheds very little light on whether it’s a good idea for kids to have access to snack now. You know what I didn’t have? A car seat after I was 2 years old. But I think it’s a good idea for kids today to have those. |
| The trouble with Americans is we are all over fed - and over watered too. There is no evidence even for drinking 8 glasses a day - that's a marketing myth. It will be healthy for your child to learn to go without food for 5 hours. |
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A scheduled snack break is appropriate in this situation. Parents should petition, and involved Central Office. I hope the Principal is letting children with documented needs eat something. The problem is that this leads to resentment in class if only one kid is allowed a snack, and some kids would go benefit from a little snack but who do not have a 504/IEP will exhibit poor behavior because their parents have not gone through the process of asking for accommodations. It's called universal design. This is part of |
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08:07 again.
I'm French, and I'd be the first to rail against eating at all hours. It's true the US has a problem with obesity, portion control and poor food choices. But here it's legitimate to have a little snack to break up the morning. |
No, she doesn’t. You sound like you need an attitude adjustment. |
+1 Based on how unhealthy many kids are today, it's not doing them any favors. I agree K-1 should be an exception though. |
+1 exactly this |
| My daughter got snack from K-5 at her public elementary school and guess what- she’s not fat, not even close. 50th percentile for height and weight. Give your kids a snack. |