Anonymous wrote:For whomever brings cake for your child's birthday, please don't. We'd love to eat cake if we have the pleasure of coming to your birthday party, but my child gets more than enough treats, even without having them around the house and without you giving my child a sugar-rush during school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a favorite was Thomas mini bagels(the are pre sliced) and a tub of Cream cheese very easy for teachers.
Why would they need the cream cheese?? Aren't American children exposed to enough extra fat?
Because otherwise it's all carbs and that makes their blood sugar spike and then crash. A small portion of fat is entirely appropriate in a child's snack.
The anti-carb diet isn't making your child thinner or healthier. If they need a little carb snack then let them have it. Otherwise quit putting food in their fat faces. The idea that pre-schoolers need a bagel and cream cheese to get through the morning is beyond stupid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my kid's elementary school a different parent brings in snack each week or something. Once I brought in animal crackers, once pb-filled pretzels, and once popcorn.
They were cool with this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a favorite was Thomas mini bagels(the are pre sliced) and a tub of Cream cheese very easy for teachers.
Why would they need the cream cheese?? Aren't American children exposed to enough extra fat?
Because otherwise it's all carbs and that makes their blood sugar spike and then crash. A small portion of fat is entirely appropriate in a child's snack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:a favorite was Thomas mini bagels(the are pre sliced) and a tub of Cream cheese very easy for teachers.
Why would they need the cream cheese?? Aren't American children exposed to enough extra fat?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD3 will be starting at our neighborhood school and I have heard that parents bring in snacks items for the class. Can anyone tell me the guidelines on this and some good things to bring? We mainly shop at Harris Teeter and Costco. It's a Title I so I will probably try to send extra of the items are shelf stable. TIA!
At YY, parents are assigned a week for the class snack, it works on rotation. They're also given a list of appropriate items (for example: chunks of melon, craisins, and veggie-booty are good). You buy enough snack for the class, and drop off a couple times during the week.
It's actually a huge relief: one week of snack-planning and then you're done for a few months. My child was always really excited about her week, we would carefully pick out the items and talk about their nutritional value. The shelf-stable items are pretty easy: pretzels, veggie chips, pirate booty, etc. Dried fruits are also good: raisins, craisins, dried apricots, etc. Then you want fresh items, but those you'll probably want to drop off more than once during "your" week: baby carrots, clementines, grapes, cut-up melon or oranges.
Bottom line: avoid nuts, avoid fried and sugary snacks, and plan a second trip to make sure you have fresh choices.
OP is at a Title I, and wants to do drive-by parenting. A selection of cut fruit mixed with dried is not going to meet her needs.
BTW, there is a baked version of Cheetos.
Anonymous wrote:a favorite was Thomas mini bagels(the are pre sliced) and a tub of Cream cheese very easy for teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DD3 will be starting at our neighborhood school and I have heard that parents bring in snacks items for the class. Can anyone tell me the guidelines on this and some good things to bring? We mainly shop at Harris Teeter and Costco. It's a Title I so I will probably try to send extra of the items are shelf stable. TIA!
At YY, parents are assigned a week for the class snack, it works on rotation. They're also given a list of appropriate items (for example: chunks of melon, craisins, and veggie-booty are good). You buy enough snack for the class, and drop off a couple times during the week.
It's actually a huge relief: one week of snack-planning and then you're done for a few months. My child was always really excited about her week, we would carefully pick out the items and talk about their nutritional value. The shelf-stable items are pretty easy: pretzels, veggie chips, pirate booty, etc. Dried fruits are also good: raisins, craisins, dried apricots, etc. Then you want fresh items, but those you'll probably want to drop off more than once during "your" week: baby carrots, clementines, grapes, cut-up melon or oranges.
Bottom line: avoid nuts, avoid fried and sugary snacks, and plan a second trip to make sure you have fresh choices.
OP is at a Title I, and wants to do drive-by parenting. A selection of cut fruit mixed with dried is not going to meet her needs.

Anonymous wrote:DD3 will be starting at our neighborhood school and I have heard that parents bring in snacks items for the class. Can anyone tell me the guidelines on this and some good things to bring? We mainly shop at Harris Teeter and Costco. It's a Title I so I will probably try to send extra of the items are shelf stable. TIA!