Anonymous wrote:Goodness, it's just a bit of sugar. If they were giving the kids Mountain Dew, I would agree, but a bit of junk on yogurt is not the end of the world. yep, I give my kid a yogurt with a bit of crushed chocolate on top sometimes with lunch, and even *gasp* chips. But there's fruit and veggies, too. We try to eat a well balanced diet otherwise. Most of our dinner is home cooked, fresh, not out of a box. We hardly eat fast food. You are going to drive your kids to go nuts on junk food when you aren't looking. Lighten up people.
Anonymous wrote:It is a PARENTS job to feed your kids. I can't even believe the school has food. It should be pack your own daily and everyone would shut the F about the food. It is a place to learn. Not a restaurant or a daycare.
OP, I think the best areas for normalcy are:
Quince Orchard HS,
Sherwood HS
Poolesville, HS
The further away you can get from down county, the better.
Anonymous wrote:It is a PARENTS job to feed your kids. I can't even believe the school has food. It should be pack your own daily and everyone would shut the F about the food. It is a place to learn. Not a restaurant or a daycare.
OP, I think the best areas for normalcy are:
Quince Orchard HS,
Sherwood HS
Poolesville, HS
The further away you can get from down county, the better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
OP here ... so one of the things I define as "down to earth" is a community where parents don't feel that they have to "invest" in their school community unless something is really wrong (i.e., impose their somewhat arbitrary bugaboos on the school). Parents should be having better things to do, like planning neighborhood barbecues and working in their yards, or delivering research papers, or making oral arguments in court.
Yes, nothing says "down to earth" to me like delivering research papers or making oral arguments in court!![]()
Fair enough! But I guess what I'm saying is that somehow my town growing up had plenty of very smart, accomplished folks who did not feel like they needed to overwhelmingly stress over the schools or their kids' academics. (With exceptions, of course.) Maybe that just does not exist anymore.
Anonymous wrote:It is a PARENTS job to feed your kids. I can't even believe the school has food. It should be pack your own daily and everyone would shut the F about the food. It is a place to learn. Not a restaurant or a daycare.
OP, I think the best areas for normalcy are:
Quince Orchard HS,
Sherwood HS
Poolesville, HS
The further away you can get from down county, the better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pro-Trix crowd -- are you really that ignorant about nutritional vs. junk food? Hard to imagine in Montgomery County that people are that ill-informed.
How about if you want to serve your kid junk food, YOU do it on your own time?
Maybe they're not ill-informed, but that's just not the particular hill they're willing to die on.
Then why are they so hell-bent on stopping others? I'm not involved in that school or that issue, but I'm completely sick of people who oppose the efforts of others who are trying to get kids to eat healthier food. It's just ignorant. Eat as much crap as you want, but don't act like ti's some kind of social virtue to do so. Our society is the fattest in history and it's astounding that people in a well-educated area like this could try to put down parents who object to a sugar-filled useless version of a healthy food item, and in a public elementary school of all places. So stupid. Being against the Trix pearl-clutchers -- THAT is the hill they shouldn't be willing to die on. And yet they are..... So weird.
I was not aware there was an active movement to keep Trix yogurt in public schools. No one is actively resisting your efforts. Some people are just rolling their eyes in the corner.
They are not my efforts. I'm not involved in any way, and as far as I know there is no Trix at my kids' schools. I'm just sick of people reacting against the parents who are trying to get crap like that out of the cafeteria. I would expect a more educated crowd around here than that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pro-Trix crowd -- are you really that ignorant about nutritional vs. junk food? Hard to imagine in Montgomery County that people are that ill-informed.
How about if you want to serve your kid junk food, YOU do it on your own time?
Maybe they're not ill-informed, but that's just not the particular hill they're willing to die on.
Then why are they so hell-bent on stopping others? I'm not involved in that school or that issue, but I'm completely sick of people who oppose the efforts of others who are trying to get kids to eat healthier food. It's just ignorant. Eat as much crap as you want, but don't act like ti's some kind of social virtue to do so. Our society is the fattest in history and it's astounding that people in a well-educated area like this could try to put down parents who object to a sugar-filled useless version of a healthy food item, and in a public elementary school of all places. So stupid. Being against the Trix pearl-clutchers -- THAT is the hill they shouldn't be willing to die on. And yet they are..... So weird.
I was not aware there was an active movement to keep Trix yogurt in public schools. No one is actively resisting your efforts. Some people are just rolling their eyes in the corner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pro-Trix crowd -- are you really that ignorant about nutritional vs. junk food? Hard to imagine in Montgomery County that people are that ill-informed.
How about if you want to serve your kid junk food, YOU do it on your own time?
Maybe they're not ill-informed, but that's just not the particular hill they're willing to die on.
Then why are they so hell-bent on stopping others? I'm not involved in that school or that issue, but I'm completely sick of people who oppose the efforts of others who are trying to get kids to eat healthier food. It's just ignorant. Eat as much crap as you want, but don't act like ti's some kind of social virtue to do so. Our society is the fattest in history and it's astounding that people in a well-educated area like this could try to put down parents who object to a sugar-filled useless version of a healthy food item, and in a public elementary school of all places. So stupid. Being against the Trix pearl-clutchers -- THAT is the hill they shouldn't be willing to die on. And yet they are..... So weird.
Anonymous wrote:Churchill cluster is down to earth. At least from our view (we have 2 at Potomac ES and love it)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pro-Trix crowd -- are you really that ignorant about nutritional vs. junk food? Hard to imagine in Montgomery County that people are that ill-informed.
How about if you want to serve your kid junk food, YOU do it on your own time?
Maybe they're not ill-informed, but that's just not the particular hill they're willing to die on.
Anonymous wrote:Pro-Trix crowd -- are you really that ignorant about nutritional vs. junk food? Hard to imagine in Montgomery County that people are that ill-informed.
How about if you want to serve your kid junk food, YOU do it on your own time?