Anonymous wrote:I bet in some cases parents are sending a snack in the lunchbox and kids are eating it at lunch and/or throwing it out if they don't finish it. Kids throw away SO much unopened food.
Anonymous wrote:One year my kid always told the teacher he didn’t have a snack because then he got the chocolate chip mini muffins in the class for the kids with no snack. He wanted those over what he brought.
Anonymous wrote:I have sent a box of snacks in to me sons class so the Teacher doesn’t have to buy all the snacks for kids. It isn’t much but it is better then nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It wasn’t until I started to work at a school that I realized the vast gulf between different kinds of parents. Every day we have kids who people forget to pick up at the end of the day, who come in without jackets, clearly who have hardly slept, who have medical and hygiene needs. A lot of people’s lives are just really chaotic.
Yup, this. I’ve worked in $$$ private schools and seen a lot of families with chaotic lives for various reasons. Many parents rely on their kids to tell them things or remind them of needs and deadlines. All kids have developing executive functions, but the ones who have less organized home lives tend to have particular problems remembering to prompt their parents for stuff.
I supervised an after-school study hall for middle schoolers, and the snack issue was a nightmare. A minority of the students had snacks with them, but everyone was hungry after school. Attempts to buy group snacks with donations led to further chaos because the same kids who didn’t have snack also forgot to bring money for the group snacks (no one was high needs in this population).
Anonymous wrote:It wasn’t until I started to work at a school that I realized the vast gulf between different kinds of parents. Every day we have kids who people forget to pick up at the end of the day, who come in without jackets, clearly who have hardly slept, who have medical and hygiene needs. A lot of people’s lives are just really chaotic.
Anonymous wrote:And you wonder why there is an obesity crisis in this country….
Anonymous wrote:When does snack time stop in school? I would have expected kindergarten or at the latest 1st grade but it sounds like 2nd grade snacks are normal from this post?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the furthest thing from a health nut but if lunch ends at noon, why is there a snack needed at 2pm? I could see it if the lunch is really oddly early like 10:45/11, but this just seems like a pain for parents to have to remember/send when it is unnecessary. My kids are hungry hippo snack monsters and could make it from noon to dismissal and eat an after school snack like all children have done for decades.
Last year my kid ate at 10:30. She was famished in the afternoon. This year my son eats at 1:15.
Anonymous wrote:I am the furthest thing from a health nut but if lunch ends at noon, why is there a snack needed at 2pm? I could see it if the lunch is really oddly early like 10:45/11, but this just seems like a pain for parents to have to remember/send when it is unnecessary. My kids are hungry hippo snack monsters and could make it from noon to dismissal and eat an after school snack like all children have done for decades.