I eat my breakfast at work and I'm 38. I'm just not hungry when I first wake. |
Do you honestly not know that not every family can afford to do so? That school breakfast and lunch are the main and most nutritious meals some children will eat all day? That some kids show up to school on Mondays having eaten little over the weekend, or little of nutritious value over the weekend? That for some families who can afford to serve a healthy breakfast at home, time is of the essence with working parents, and it's a major convenience? For which we are very grateful? Ever heard about the connection between being fed and being ready to learn? Or schools that don't usually serve breakfast but who will bring it in before big test days? And from where does this rule come? Breakfast is a meal eaten at home in the morning, before you start your day. Breakfast should be eaten at home. What, you've never eaten breakfast out? |
Sorry, two of the three--ignorant and a jerk. |
No stigmas. I think primarily the school is not set up to serve food. There is no cafeteria, no kitchen, the food comes in on a truck and is served in the hallway, then the kids eat at their desks. All of that probably does turn some people off. As it is, with very few kids getting lunch, the line is very long in the hallway and kids complain that by the time they get back to their desks with lunch there is no time to eat. If everyone tried to get lunch it would be a logistical disaster (how long would it take to serve 630 kids in a narrow hallway, even with staggered lunch periods?). But the kids who get school lunch seem to like it well enough. As for breakfast, same hallway set up, plus it seems that most kids walk to school after eating at home and want to play on the playground as long as possible before the school bell rings. Going in to breakfast would take away play time. For us, breakfast is family time. It is how we start our day together, then we walk to school and the kids play until the bell rings. |
Yes, and yes. 1929; never renovated. |
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I think having breakfast served at school probably does seem more like the norm and not odd if your children did daycare, where breakfast is usually served as the kids arrive, and DCPS preschool, where breakfast is also served. Your family is accustomed the convenience and usually pressed for time in the morning.
Private, 9-12 type preschools do not serve breakfast so it probably does seem strange to start elementary school and see that the first item on the agenda is eating. |
And the same people who are too lazy to teach their 2 year old to use a toilet are the same people who take the easy route with food and become a short order cook for their 3 year old. There's a reason why your child will only eat chicken nuggets or peanut butter or mac and cheese and it's not because your kid has an innate taste for them. They are all culturally acquired tastes. if you regularly feed them vegetables and don't pander to their whim they will gain a much broader palate. |
| You don't sound like someone with experience with a picky eater. I used to think along similar lines to you until my child dropped two curves on the growth chart and the pediatrician put him on Pediasure. I hate giving him that, but he won't eat the high calorie nutritious smoothies I make, etc. It is really hard to deal with, esp for a parent who is well known as a great cook, too! |
So, you advocate bragging about your parenting skills? that sounds like a load of fun for your parent friends to endure. |
It does sound like you have struggled there and it's great that you have medical help, but most picky eaters (those without allergies, physical problems cheating or eating or textual issues) are created not born. I know I have one and he's slowly getting less picky because I refuse to put up with it anymore. My mistake for offering him alternatives when he was younger. |
I didn't mention my parenting skills let alone brag about them. I was talking about yours. |
Please provide a weekly balanced breakfast and lunch menu that you serve for your child. I'm really curious. And do you repeat the following week? |
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"At our school, maybe a handful eat breakfast, based on what I see when I do before care drop-off. I have no idea whether its offered for free to everyone, but I've never considered it."
Why would I? I don't consider institutional food very healthy as a general matter. While the menus read healthy, I can do better at home buying organic, buying fruit that I know is ripe and will be eaten, offering foods that the schools don't offer, and being there to oversee what is being eaten. |
ha ha ha ha I so wish that this were true |
Mundo Verde doesn't have a cafeteria, and they are newly renovated, and I know I've heard this from other schools. I think it's partially a high rent/urban space issue. But coming from suburbia, I thought this was weird, too.
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