Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
You know why the teacher would give the breakfast to everyone. Because we're required to! Relax just a little.
I know you're supposed to offer. But, then I specifically asked you not to. I specifically told you that she'd been fed at home. Can she please go play in the "dramatic play" corner or read in the "library section"? I was really clear about not wanting the school food. You didn't listen to me. That's one reason you have one less high-performing child at your school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Ugh, that sucks. But why did the teacher have them sit like that? Is it really so hard to move a plate from one table to another?
this seems like overkill. You want your kid to eat shitty food just to make some point to a bunch of kids who don't even care or notice? This is life. not everyone gets the same thing or has the same experiences. This is not shaming at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Ugh, that sucks. But why did the teacher have them sit like that? Is it really so hard to move a plate from one table to another?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
You know why the teacher would give the breakfast to everyone. Because we're required to! Relax just a little.
I know you're supposed to offer. But, then I specifically asked you not to. I specifically told you that she'd been fed at home. Can she please go play in the "dramatic play" corner or read in the "library section"? I was really clear about not wanting the school food. You didn't listen to me. That's one reason you have one less high-performing child at your school.
Sounds like one less overly demanding nagging mom with lots of demands for her special snowflake. Glad to see her go.
No you're not. Test scores matter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
You know why the teacher would give the breakfast to everyone. Because we're required to! Relax just a little.
I know you're supposed to offer. But, then I specifically asked you not to. I specifically told you that she'd been fed at home. Can she please go play in the "dramatic play" corner or read in the "library section"? I was really clear about not wanting the school food. You didn't listen to me. That's one reason you have one less high-performing child at your school.
Sounds like one less overly demanding nagging mom with lots of demands for her special snowflake. Glad to see her go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
You know why the teacher would give the breakfast to everyone. Because we're required to! Relax just a little.
I know you're supposed to offer. But, then I specifically asked you not to. I specifically told you that she'd been fed at home. Can she please go play in the "dramatic play" corner or read in the "library section"? I was really clear about not wanting the school food. You didn't listen to me. That's one reason you have one less high-performing child at your school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
It's not complicated or tough to make a turkey sandwich or pack a yogurt, many of the kids at my Title 1 school are poor and they don't have much food at home. That is why they have free school lunch. I care enough about my kids to not have them look differently at the poor kids. It's not good enough for me to have my kids looking down on poor people. Thank you for leaving our school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
It's not complicated or tough to make a turkey sandwich or pack a yogurt, many of the kids at my Title 1 school are poor and they don't have much food at home. That is why they have free school lunch. I care enough about my kids to not have them look differently at the poor kids. It's not good enough for me to have my kids looking down on poor people. Thank you for leaving our school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
You know why the teacher would give the breakfast to everyone. Because we're required to! Relax just a little.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We began PK3 last year at at Title 1 school last year and packed lunch. Kid comes home one day and says all of the pink (white) kids pack lunch and the brown (black) kids get free lunch together. I went in and talked to the teacher, who did confirm that there was a perfect racial split for packed vs school lunch in the classroom, which also meant they sat by race since the teacher just served the free lunch at one table to half the kids. I talked with other parents, we stopped packing lunch, and our 3 and 4 year olds stopped being segregated at lunch time. I don't know if the food was great, but he never came home hungry and I hate the dynamic we had set up.
Your choice, but it's not good enough for my family. The dynamic that's been set up is that some people don't care enough to provide their children with a healthy lunch. Somehow it's complicated to make a turkey sandwich on whole wheat with lettuce and tomato. It's too expensive to buy fresh fruit or applesauce. Yogurt is too time-consuming to grab out of the freezer and put in a lunch bag.
I really hated it when the teachers at our Title I PS would give the breakfast to everyone - including my child. Hello? I already fed her at home and I DON'T WANT her learning to eat those unhealthy foods her classmates eat. I don't want her to be a part of that fat culture.
Yuck. Ultimately, it was another reason that made it so much easier for us to switch to an HRC when she got in.