Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why didn't you get easy thinks like pudding that doesn't need to be kept cold, pirate booty or even sun chips? I am feeling for your reno but seriously there are a lot of easy healthy options that are no muss no fuss.
So what's the big difference between pirate booty, sun chips, and freetos? They all have sodium and fat. Pudding can have a lot of sugar. I is too hard to draw a line so the teacher should allow it all and concentrate on teaching
Anonymous wrote:Why didn't you get easy thinks like pudding that doesn't need to be kept cold, pirate booty or even sun chips? I am feeling for your reno but seriously there are a lot of easy healthy options that are no muss no fuss.
Anonymous wrote:I would've sent the fritos in anyway and dealt with the teacher if she actually did something. Would she take your DDs snack away and let her starve?
Yes, I think your teacher overstepped her bounds.
Anonymous wrote:She's not necessarily trying to regulate your kid's nutrition. She's probably more interested in regulating the classroom environment. The teacher is making a snack is an option when the kids genuinely need food to sustain themselves rather than having a "treat time" which can be disruptive and take up class time. Fritos are also greasy and salty, which leads to kids licking their fingers and touching things with their spit covered fingers, which is gross. If you tell kids that they can only bring in healthy food, it discourages kids from bringing in a snack just for fun. Your kid is old enough to live without a snack so stop blaming the teacher for having limits on something that is optional.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow my dd's are in FCPS, and we have never had food taken away. I try to pack healthy stuff, but my dd in 2nd grade is an extremely picky eater. For lunch today, I packed cheddar cheese, fruit roll up, chocolate chip cookies and potato chips. Gross right? If I pack healthy stuff like apples and oranges, she doesn't eat them. If she doesn't like what I send, she goes and buys a soft pretzel and a container of ice cream from the cafeteria. I guess the food police in Mont Co would have a problem with my dd. She would just sit there and not eat.
You are talking about lunch. OP is talking about optional snack that the teacher permits to happen in her classroom. Totally different things. No one cares what OP's kid is eating at lunch.
OP never clarified that. It may be part of the kid's lunch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow my dd's are in FCPS, and we have never had food taken away. I try to pack healthy stuff, but my dd in 2nd grade is an extremely picky eater. For lunch today, I packed cheddar cheese, fruit roll up, chocolate chip cookies and potato chips. Gross right? If I pack healthy stuff like apples and oranges, she doesn't eat them. If she doesn't like what I send, she goes and buys a soft pretzel and a container of ice cream from the cafeteria. I guess the food police in Mont Co would have a problem with my dd. She would just sit there and not eat.
You are talking about lunch. OP is talking about optional snack that the teacher permits to happen in her classroom. Totally different things. No one cares what OP's kid is eating at lunch.
Anonymous wrote:Wow my dd's are in FCPS, and we have never had food taken away. I try to pack healthy stuff, but my dd in 2nd grade is an extremely picky eater. For lunch today, I packed cheddar cheese, fruit roll up, chocolate chip cookies and potato chips. Gross right? If I pack healthy stuff like apples and oranges, she doesn't eat them. If she doesn't like what I send, she goes and buys a soft pretzel and a container of ice cream from the cafeteria. I guess the food police in Mont Co would have a problem with my dd. She would just sit there and not eat.