School is most of their day. Dismissing daily school routines as irrelevant doesn’t line up with how kids learn. |
The 2000s are calling and want their Mommy Wars back. Keep up. |
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My kids are at a title I public charter in DC and they have fresh fruit and/or veg once or twice a day (depending on age..older kids don't have two snacks).
They are lucky to be at a place with an in house kitchen which isn't common for DC publics but I would assume the privates have those? And, if I was paying those prices, I would definitely want whole foods .. it doesn't seem like a crazy request. |
This is getting beyond dumb. You really need to get your priorities straight if a daily school snack gets you this worked up. What if, god forbid, your kid eats a dessert? Please seek professional help. |
If you were truly interested in a positive environment for 6 or 8 or 12 years, you’d think harder about the level of entitlement your child is exposed to every day. But no, it’s the goldfish you’re worried about. |
Are we still talking about a teacher provided snack at school? What on earth are you rambling on about. |
You seem very confused. There are about 180 school days so 180 snacks. This isn’t rare or insignificant, it all adds up. |
If caring about daily nutrition is framed as entitlement, I think we just have very different standards for what defines a strong school environment... |
The snacks rotate and are small portions. Breakfast, lunch, and dinner are way more important. Get a life. Seriously. |
You’re arguing on and on about snacks and are telling other people to get a life? |
Totally not out of touch! Moderation is at the heart of healthiness. Also, exercise is a lifestyle. There is no luck involved and it’s not rocket science. It’s the same advice doctors have been giving for a hundred years! |
I think that person was agreeing with you. Healthy habits and not engaging in a daily unhealthy habit leads to overall better health 💖 |
When did goldfish crackers become unhealthy? Seems pretty neutral to me. |
np - Aren't you judgy! My kids are now teenagers, but I made a big effort to feed them healthily in their early years, before the junk of the world was available to them. I think it worked great! They were rarely sick, and are now strong, healthy, and smart. Obviously, I don't know what they would be like if I had fed them ice cream and Cheez-its from the start. But I feel good that I started off their physical health in the best way I could. I, too, complained in pre-school about some of the snacks, and I feel no shame about that. Science is in my side. |
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I have absolutely no problem with a packet of goldfish here and there. But there are days where my child has been given 2 bags of Fridos/chips (3 if they stay for the after-school enrichment). They usually provide one type of snack and offer it to the kids twice (morning and afternoon), so if it’s chips they get it twice. This is happening at least once a week, way more often than they offer something like veggies and dip. They do offer fruit but it’s completely unappealing to kindergarteners next to chips, whole fruit not cut up or prepared for kindergarteners. The staff told my child they had to peel the orange themselves if they wanted it, and you try eating a whole apple with wobbly front teeth.
Add in relatively unhealthy lunch (pasta, pizza, grilled cheese) and once a week sweet treat/birthday treat, it’s a lot more than an occasional snack. And then on the weekend we get to eat healthy at all the birthday parties… lol |