Anonymous wrote:Such an Arlington problem
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So it sounds like daycare, not preschool. Preschools families take turns bringing in snacks and they only have the one snack.
What they are serving is normal. They would have to charge a lot more tuition to cover serving organic berries and cheese cube---more expensive to purchase and you have to pay someone to prepare them. 90% of families find those snacks perfectly healthy and acceptable.
OP here. I never said they sound be serving them organic anything. Where did you get that idea? I pay almost $2000 a month which for me isn’t pocket change. The snacks are acceptable but definitely not healthy. They are basically empty calories.
They aren't empty calories. They have carbs and carbs are fuel. For a preschooler whor race around all day, a few wheat thins or some goldfish are perfectly fine. Very common mass snacks. Your kid is going to get these snacks at a thousand different activities and events over the course of his life. Your child can eat a range of foods and be healthy.
Anonymous wrote:What school is your child going to? Mine go to Children's Montessori house. The meals are served by the good food company. Snacks consist of fresh fruit, a carb and a protein. Sometimes they will serve crackers or what not but most of the snack is healthy. Here is their lunch menu for last year: https://www.montessoriofarlington.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/Lunch-calendar-Feb-Sep-19.pdf
Everything they eat for lunch is whole grain. There is fresh fruit and they serve greens. Its not perfect but I've been satisfied with what they serve. Perhaps talk to the director and see if other parents are the same. People who think that what you listed is healthy are deluded and probably love feeding their kids crap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, what snacks would you want your child to have? Can you pack your own?
Our Arlington preschool was pretty limited in what they could provide because it wasn’t an authorized food service provider (or some phrase like that). I sent in my own, following the allergies and safety restrictions (cut grapes, no popcorn, etc).
Thanks everyone for the suggestions. I have sent some snacks with my son - cheese, chopped up grapes, berries, sliced apples, carrots etc. He usually loves eating these but so far they have come back barely touched. I think its because he just wants to eat what everyone else is eating =) He is a social eater and also doesn't like feeling different. Completely understandable I guess.
Based on what everyone is saying it seems like this is the norm.
Anonymous wrote:OP, why don't you send in a few bags of apples, oranges, peaches and some containers of strawberries for all the kids. Same with some cheese. Problem solved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So it sounds like daycare, not preschool. Preschools families take turns bringing in snacks and they only have the one snack.
What they are serving is normal. They would have to charge a lot more tuition to cover serving organic berries and cheese cube---more expensive to purchase and you have to pay someone to prepare them. 90% of families find those snacks perfectly healthy and acceptable.
Haha maybe at your preschool - our preschools serve the snack (country day school in McLean, village green in great falls, lank in reston - no parents bring the snacks!!)