Good for you, madamoiselle. |
| As a nanny for many years I have found that most parents don’t allow snacks . I gave food only at scheduled times and it worked just fine . Kids never even asked for food. |
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I just never found this to be a big deal. If a kid was hungry s/he can eat. Offer stuff like cheese, fruit, veggies, hummus. If they’re eating healthy foods, meals aren’t inherently better than “snacks.” Put the approved snacks where the kids can reach, and if they aren’t hungry enough for carrot sticks or an apple or whatever, they don’t have to eat.
We definitely never had a snack schedule or limited healthy snacks. I’m an adult & snack when I’m hungry. My kids are now teen/tween age and seem to eat just fine. |
I agree with this |
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Op a 3 and 5 year old shoukd get at least 2 may e 3 snacks a day. Even a preschool offers that.
You are applying adult earing tonkids. They are energetic and burn off most of what they eat especially if you aren't giving them enough carbs. Offer a screen so you can work. Pay for daycare. Also set up their snack before you enter your meeting. It should be something whole grain, fruit or dairy. |
Are you joking? Snacks are often processed. I plan their meals so they have 5 veg a day, adequate fiber, protein. If they don’t eat at mealtime their diet isn’t balanced. Anyway I don’t like to waste food. |
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Establish standard meal and snacks times, e.g.
7:30am breakfast 10am snack 12:30pm lunch 3:30pm snack 6pm dinner |
Same- I don't limit snacks (but I do control what's available since I do the grocery shopping). My kids have never asked for more than 1 or 2 snacks a day and I am finr with that. OTH, they pester me for dessert almost nonstop so maybe I am not doing so great after all! |
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My kids are allowed to snack whenever they want to on whatever food they can scrounge up. And I buys lots of processed crap for them to snack on: pop tarts, chips, cookies, ice cream, etc.
Meals are healthy and they always eat breakfast, lunch, and dinner. They’re growing kids - they know when they’re hungry. |
Different poster, but this response seems peculiar to me. While snacks are, indeed, often processed, it is not intrinsic to the definition of a snack. Moreover, meals are not necessarily nutritious. If the meal offered is McDonald’s and the kid only eats the fries and ignores the burger, vs. a snack of carrot sticks, a hard-boiled egg, and apple slices, maybe the child should be snacking more frequently. I admit that this hypothetical is atypical, but it illustrates that feeding a child between meals is only unhealthy because of the food being offered, not the timing. |
Np. It's not bad advice even if it doesn't work for all kids. It is true that kids need to start working on independence, even if the exact details will vary. If a kid can't open the snack yet or get their own stool, maybe you can start by using a low shelf and have the kid bring you snacks for help. It doesn't have to be pre-packaged either. It can be snacks in tupperware or fruit or whatever works for your family. |
| Op you need to make sure they’re getting enough and properly balanced foods at actual meal times |
| I say we don’t do snacks but our snack time is a set time like lunch or dinner, same time everyday twice a day no snacks outside of that. We go to play dates and it used to drive me crazy the parents who basically just sit and feed their kids unhealthy snacks at the park because of course all kids want in on it, but my kids now know it’s not snack time and move on quickly. |
Obviously, they are hungry. What are you feeding them or not feeding them? |
Have the nanny or sitter make their snacks. |