Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ask your Principal to allow kindergartners to eat lunch in their classrooms!
This is what our Principal did after a disastrous year of Kindergartners eating lunch at 10:30 in the cafeteria because of overcrowding (5th graders ate lunch at 1:30).
Everyone was much happier with a more normal lunch time. Eating in classrooms isn't a bad thing at all.
Most schools do not have the staffing to have supervision in each classroom at lunch time.
Honestly this was a problem that we had during COVID when students were still eating in the classroom. There aren't necessarily half a dozen people around the school that have nothing to do for either that 30 minutes or longer if they're supporting multiple lunches.
This should not be an issue for the next few years. Principals are being given ESSR III funds with discretion to hire hourly people.
FYI, the pay for a "cafeteria hostess" is $11.00 per hour. I overheard our office staff complaining that they'd gotten some inquiries but no one was willing to do it for that amount, especially now with the Delta variant.
The fast food places have figured it out. What do they know that FCPS can't figure out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ask your Principal to allow kindergartners to eat lunch in their classrooms!
This is what our Principal did after a disastrous year of Kindergartners eating lunch at 10:30 in the cafeteria because of overcrowding (5th graders ate lunch at 1:30).
Everyone was much happier with a more normal lunch time. Eating in classrooms isn't a bad thing at all.
Most schools do not have the staffing to have supervision in each classroom at lunch time.
Honestly this was a problem that we had during COVID when students were still eating in the classroom. There aren't necessarily half a dozen people around the school that have nothing to do for either that 30 minutes or longer if they're supporting multiple lunches.
This should not be an issue for the next few years. Principals are being given ESSR III funds with discretion to hire hourly people.
FYI, the pay for a "cafeteria hostess" is $11.00 per hour. I overheard our office staff complaining that they'd gotten some inquiries but no one was willing to do it for that amount, especially now with the Delta variant.
The fast food places have figured it out. What do they know that FCPS can't figure out?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ask your Principal to allow kindergartners to eat lunch in their classrooms!
This is what our Principal did after a disastrous year of Kindergartners eating lunch at 10:30 in the cafeteria because of overcrowding (5th graders ate lunch at 1:30).
Everyone was much happier with a more normal lunch time. Eating in classrooms isn't a bad thing at all.
Most schools do not have the staffing to have supervision in each classroom at lunch time.
Honestly this was a problem that we had during COVID when students were still eating in the classroom. There aren't necessarily half a dozen people around the school that have nothing to do for either that 30 minutes or longer if they're supporting multiple lunches.
Then hire more people. No child should have to eat lunch at 10:30. Only in the US where people don't understand meals and food is this a problem.
OP here and agree. Meals are supposed to be nourishing at the right time, between 11:45-1.
Sure, but you can't fit (in some cases) 900-1,000 students into an undersized cafeteria in half hour blocks between 11:45 and 1:00.
The school can make it happen if there’s willingness and pressure from families.
Nope cannot happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ask your Principal to allow kindergartners to eat lunch in their classrooms!
This is what our Principal did after a disastrous year of Kindergartners eating lunch at 10:30 in the cafeteria because of overcrowding (5th graders ate lunch at 1:30).
Everyone was much happier with a more normal lunch time. Eating in classrooms isn't a bad thing at all.
Most schools do not have the staffing to have supervision in each classroom at lunch time.
Honestly this was a problem that we had during COVID when students were still eating in the classroom. There aren't necessarily half a dozen people around the school that have nothing to do for either that 30 minutes or longer if they're supporting multiple lunches.
This should not be an issue for the next few years. Principals are being given ESSR III funds with discretion to hire hourly people.
FYI, the pay for a "cafeteria hostess" is $11.00 per hour. I overheard our office staff complaining that they'd gotten some inquiries but no one was willing to do it for that amount, especially now with the Delta variant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ask your Principal to allow kindergartners to eat lunch in their classrooms!
This is what our Principal did after a disastrous year of Kindergartners eating lunch at 10:30 in the cafeteria because of overcrowding (5th graders ate lunch at 1:30).
Everyone was much happier with a more normal lunch time. Eating in classrooms isn't a bad thing at all.
Most schools do not have the staffing to have supervision in each classroom at lunch time.
Honestly this was a problem that we had during COVID when students were still eating in the classroom. There aren't necessarily half a dozen people around the school that have nothing to do for either that 30 minutes or longer if they're supporting multiple lunches.
Then hire more people. No child should have to eat lunch at 10:30. Only in the US where people don't understand meals and food is this a problem.
OP here and agree. Meals are supposed to be nourishing at the right time, between 11:45-1.
Sure, but you can't fit (in some cases) 900-1,000 students into an undersized cafeteria in half hour blocks between 11:45 and 1:00.
The school can make it happen if there’s willingness and pressure from families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ask your Principal to allow kindergartners to eat lunch in their classrooms!
This is what our Principal did after a disastrous year of Kindergartners eating lunch at 10:30 in the cafeteria because of overcrowding (5th graders ate lunch at 1:30).
Everyone was much happier with a more normal lunch time. Eating in classrooms isn't a bad thing at all.
Most schools do not have the staffing to have supervision in each classroom at lunch time.
Honestly this was a problem that we had during COVID when students were still eating in the classroom. There aren't necessarily half a dozen people around the school that have nothing to do for either that 30 minutes or longer if they're supporting multiple lunches.
Then hire more people. No child should have to eat lunch at 10:30. Only in the US where people don't understand meals and food is this a problem.
OP here and agree. Meals are supposed to be nourishing at the right time, between 11:45-1.
Sure, but you can't fit (in some cases) 900-1,000 students into an undersized cafeteria in half hour blocks between 11:45 and 1:00.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's always been this way, OP. My kids are in high school, but I remember when they had 10:30 breakfast some years in grade school. Lunch runs 10:30 to 1:30 in many schools. Some years, my kid at lunch at 1 p.m. It's different every year.
With this mentality nothing changes and kids are malnourished. Just one year of a nonsense schedule can damage their health and habits.
Anonymous wrote:What’s next in the nonsense daily schedule?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's always been this way, OP. My kids are in high school, but I remember when they had 10:30 breakfast some years in grade school. Lunch runs 10:30 to 1:30 in many schools. Some years, my kid at lunch at 1 p.m. It's different every year.
With this mentality nothing changes and kids are malnourished. Just one year of a nonsense schedule can damage their health and habits.
Anonymous wrote:It's always been this way, OP. My kids are in high school, but I remember when they had 10:30 breakfast some years in grade school. Lunch runs 10:30 to 1:30 in many schools. Some years, my kid at lunch at 1 p.m. It's different every year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do realize that's been a thing for ever, right?
Yep, had this lunch time in 1994. It sucked, though. I was starving by 3pm and then I would just get powdered donuts or a chocolate bar from the vending machine before sports practice which made me feel like garbage.