Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child will also be attending Beauvoir next year and I am very impressed with the lunch service they provide! Quite frankly, I'm trying to figure out how many days a week I can volunteer for lunch services so I too can partake in some of those gourmet fabulous meals! I plan on telling my DC to eat up and as much as possible because at home there will be no fancy meals. I work, have no nanny or Au Pair and don't have the time to do much more than throw something in the oven, steam some veggies and boil some rice on any given day! So yeah, I'm pretty giddy over the fact that my DC is going to have the opportunity to eat some pretty amazing food (from a variety of cultures) on a daily basis; food that I would not otherwise have the opportunity to expose DC too on a regular basis.
If am really lucky, DC will stop saying their favorite meal is chicken nuggets, french fries and ketchup! Hahahaha! Whatever additional cost the lunch and snacks add to the tuition bill, I'm happy to pay without hesitation. I seriously doubt it's preventing the school from providing a top-notch education (oh wait, it is part of the educational experience)...so that fixes that problem. LOL.
If you've allowed this, you already have a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am amazed by these menus..but in the end I would still likely be packing a pb&J for my child who would not find much preferred selection.
At some schools, like Sidwell, that isn't allowed. Everyone eats the school lunch. That was true back in my day 25+ years ago as well. In those days the meals were served family style and it was supposed to promote egalitarianism and community.
Anonymous wrote:I am amazed by these menus..but in the end I would still likely be packing a pb&J for my child who would not find much preferred selection.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child will also be attending Beauvoir next year and I am very impressed with the lunch service they provide! Quite frankly, I'm trying to figure out how many days a week I can volunteer for lunch services so I too can partake in some of those gourmet fabulous meals! I plan on telling my DC to eat up and as much as possible because at home there will be no fancy meals. I work, have no nanny or Au Pair and don't have the time to do much more than throw something in the oven, steam some veggies and boil some rice on any given day! So yeah, I'm pretty giddy over the fact that my DC is going to have the opportunity to eat some pretty amazing food (from a variety of cultures) on a daily basis; food that I would not otherwise have the opportunity to expose DC too on a regular basis.
If am really lucky, DC will stop saying their favorite meal is chicken nuggets, french fries and ketchup! Hahahaha! Whatever additional cost the lunch and snacks add to the tuition bill, I'm happy to pay without hesitation. I seriously doubt it's preventing the school from providing a top-notch education (oh wait, it is part of the educational experience)...so that fixes that problem. LOL.
If you've allowed this, you already have a problem.
Anonymous wrote:My child will also be attending Beauvoir next year and I am very impressed with the lunch service they provide! Quite frankly, I'm trying to figure out how many days a week I can volunteer for lunch services so I too can partake in some of those gourmet fabulous meals! I plan on telling my DC to eat up and as much as possible because at home there will be no fancy meals. I work, have no nanny or Au Pair and don't have the time to do much more than throw something in the oven, steam some veggies and boil some rice on any given day! So yeah, I'm pretty giddy over the fact that my DC is going to have the opportunity to eat some pretty amazing food (from a variety of cultures) on a daily basis; food that I would not otherwise have the opportunity to expose DC too on a regular basis.
If am really lucky, DC will stop saying their favorite meal is chicken nuggets, french fries and ketchup! Hahahaha! Whatever additional cost the lunch and snacks add to the tuition bill, I'm happy to pay without hesitation. I seriously doubt it's preventing the school from providing a top-notch education (oh wait, it is part of the educational experience)...so that fixes that problem. LOL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ehh, these schools should serve nutritious, but simple foods and use the money saved for actual educational purposes.
The schools clearly aren't hurting for money to put towards educational purposes.
Why do simple when you don't have to? Stop being a Debbie downer. Not only is the food nutritious but it's also exposing the children to a variety of cultures through food and opening their palate to be healthy, non-picky eaters. I for one was impressed by the lunch offerings at the school my DC will start at in the fall (Beauvoir) and it was definitely a big selling point in moving it to our first choice over schools that offered no lunch like GDS. I'm happy to pay it as part of the tuition and never have to worry about doing anything other than dropping DC off at school and not worrying about packing lunches or God forbid forgetting to fund some lunch spend account and having nasty notes sent home that my child will not eat tomorrow if I don't pay up!
Anonymous wrote:One additional perspective. I am a teacher, and so I eat the lunch provided as well. As a retention tool, it is a nice incentive to work in private. I took a pay cut when I left the public school system, and it's helpful that lunch is included. Also, I agree that the lunches are not fancy per se, they are just nutritious and wholesome and creative. They fuel the kids so they can learn. Healthy body, health minds.