^^ she heard one mom brought candy to one of the parties and marched down to that classroom to identify the culprit. She aggressively asked every parent in the room if they brought it. Crazy town. |
Ha! No. I just feel very boring. |
| I like the rule. We all eat way too much junk as it is (myself and kids included). |
It's for health reasons, to encourage healthy eating and discourage obesity. Forbidding cookies doesn't seem like a good way to go about doing that, IMO. |
|
Our preschool had a rule about no candy or sweets in lunches, except for the week or two after Halloween when kids could bring in one piece a day. I was okay with that -- if I'm choosing and paying for a program, I live by their rules.
Our elementary school has no rule, and I'd be pretty annoyed if they started policing lunchboxes to that level. Setting rules about allergens or not sharing food makes sense from a safety point of view, but going beyond that seems too intrusive and overbearing for a public school. |
| I don't care one way or the other. |
| I think it's a great rule. We all eat too much candy (myself included). I have a DS in preschool and they allow juice if it's 100% juice. I don't pack juice in DS lunch and he constantly complains that one of his classmates always has juice in his lunch and it's not fair. I just keep telling him that he can't always have what others have and I'm sure there are some things he has that friend doesn't have. |
| I’m ok with no nuts, etc., but you cannot tell me what to put in the lunch, healthy or not. If they really want to control what the children eat, they should make better hot lunches so I wouldn’t have to pack one every darn morning! |
+1 Less candy doesn't sound like a bad thing. I wouldn't care either. |
I am the OP and I agree. It is a public school, not private. The school lunches are terrible. |
| No candy, no nuts, no fresh fruit. Ludicrous, stupid Nazi rules! |
No fresh fruit? I pack that every day. |
I agree. I tell my kids that they will eat what I send and if the teacher has an issue she can send me an email. |
|
Our school has a no candy/sweets rule. I think it's fine - is it really so problematic for you that your kid doesn't get a cookie/sugar in the middle of the day?
My kids are allowed to have a piece of Halloween candy at breakfast and one with dinner. It is fine. They are happy. No one is losing out on anything. |
Plus the kids in this area (fairfax county) are not obese. They are not even fat. Look around at your elementary schools and you will see this is true. We do not have an obesity epidemic in this area. Overall, we are an affluent, active, educated community. A literally bite sized snickers in the lunch of kids who are not overweight, have access to healthy food, and who are playing sports or doing active activities year round is not a bad thing or something to be banned. Banning it makes it forbidden fruit ratyer than teaching kids treats in moderation. |