Anonymous wrote:If you don’t want your kid to have ice cream, pack lunch and don’t fund a school lunch account if your kid won’t follow your rules.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain what kind of ice cream is available?
It's like this. https://wellsfoodservice.com/products/blue-ribbon-classics/cups/low-fat-chocolate-vanilla-ice-cream-cup
Small, low-fat, and about 70 calories total. Not health food, but not the hill I'm going to die on particularly when kids can only buy it if their parents put money on their account.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain what kind of ice cream is available?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain what kind of ice cream is available?
It's like this. https://wellsfoodservice.com/products/blue-ribbon-classics/cups/low-fat-chocolate-vanilla-ice-cream-cup
Small, low-fat, and about 70 calories total. Not health food, but not the hill I'm going to die on particularly when kids can only buy it if their parents put money on their account.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain what kind of ice cream is available?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don’t want your kid to eat ice cream at lunch have that conversation with your kid. There is no need for it to be removed from MS option for all kids.
If you only do sweets at holidays and birthdays, great for you. That’s not most of us. We teach our kids about a balance diet, including how to manage sweets. If the kid is consuming ice cream at lunch everyday, I would be sure they are eating other things that balance that out and then move on. I’m not dying on that hill w/ a teenager. If kids can find joy and bonding over ice cream, then have at it. There are worse things that could be happening.
With the rate of childhood obesity (and adult obesity) it should be. But it taste good, kids will buy it, and staff doesn’t have to actually cook it, so no one cares.
Anonymous wrote:Welcome to mcps. The ice cream in the cafeteria is your first clue to how much mcps cares about students. Zero.
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for sharing. I understand the context of eating disorders outweighs the concern about sugar. But it doesn’t mean we should have an all or nothing approach. Nobody is suggesting that kids diet should be micromanaged: they is what they want and how much they want. I am of the opinion that ideally sweets should be reserved for special occasions, like holidays and birthdays. What PPs might be missing is that it is not just “a little ice cream” every day. Kids are bombarded with sugar everywhere. Teachers bring candies and cookies at my MCPS school almost daily, school events include sweets, kids like to go to Starbucks or get bobba after school to hang out, as PP explained, some kids eat a bowl of ice cream at home after dinner, there are birthday parties, Halloween, Thanksgiving, sleepovers with sweets… it doesn’t stop. It needs to be managed, less sugar is better than more. At least, we should be able to limit ice cream for lunch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not try to micromanage your pre-teen's food choices. Ice cream is not poison and it's just fine as a daily snack. Heaven knows, that kid probably gets limited food choices at home if the parent is having conniptions over ice cream. Did you think your child would stay the size and weight of a 10-year-old? Kids this age grow, gain weight, and change shape. Girls this age are already having body image issues. You should ensure you are not subconsciously reinforcing disordered eating habits.
Thanks, but not an issue here. We are not judging body sizes, and my child does not have a body image problem. I am concerned about HEALTH. It is important what you put into your body. We all should be able to have discussions on healthy diet/weight without gettIng offended.