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GreatSchools: Involved Parents. Successful Kids

The new food fighters

Will Arne Duncan and Michelle Obama serve your child a better school lunch?

By Carol Lloyd
 

Since scientists began linking the rise in childhood obesity to high-fat, high-sugar diets, alarm bells have been ringing about the sorry state of school lunches in the United States. In 2005 predictions that, for the first time in the nation's history, children were not expected to live longer than their parents galvanized a movement of activists, parents, and health professionals who lobbied for change.
Since then new guidelines attempt to bar those "ketchup is a vegetable" loopholes. In 2006 legislation began requiring that every school district develop its own "wellness plan."

The results have been mixed. Some schools and school districts have pioneered the idea of healthier lunches — cooking up a host of new partnerships and programs. In 1994 slow-food guru Alice Waters broke ground on her Edible Schoolyard, a program at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School in Berkeley, Calif., that teaches students to cultivate their own organic garden and cook their own meals. Several large school districts — including Chicago’s and Los Angeles’ — have broken ties with their corporate sugar daddies and banished Coke and other sodas from their vending machines. Pioneering schools — from Compton, Calif., to Kohler, Wis. — now include salad bar alternatives to the usual, greasy suspects like sloppy joes and pizza.

Do inmates eat better than students?

Gray green beans. Tepid Tater Tots. Mystery meat. In case you’re clueless about what we're serving our students, American Lunchroom, a new online chronicle of the school system's culinary attempts, offers a gruesome close-up of modern-day meals. Aside from the chicken tacos with organic rice, beans, and salad from the Berkeley Unified School District, we're talking deep-fried chunks and questionable sauces.

Can't be that bad? According to this video, the U.S. prison system requires higher nutritional standards than our school system.

But there's still a long way to go. Recent studies show that 32% of U.S. children are obese or overweight, though evidence suggests that obesity rates are leveling off. And when the slop hits the tray, many school lunches are only marginally better than prison grub. Actually I take that back. Prison food may be better for you (see “Do Inmates Eat Better Than Students?”).

Yet with health foodies storming the White House, the school lunch revolution may have reached its tipping point. Even amid the federal budget crisis, President Barack Obama allocated an extra $1 billion for child nutrition programs including school food in 2010. Last March, First Lady Michelle Obama started the first "organic"garden on the White House grounds (which, as it turns out, can't actually be certified as organic because a sludge-based fertilizer was used during a previous administration) — a symbolic move Waters had been championing for years. At a harvest celebration in June, the first lady delivered a food policy speech that addressed the need to improve school lunches. Before becoming the White House chef, Sam Kass denounced the artificially flavored and colored, high-meat, and low-vegetable meals the National School Lunch Program produces. Finally, the new secretary of education, Arne Duncan, may also lend a sympathetic ear to the food warriors. Recently during his "listening tour" on education reform, he chose to take his lunch break at Barnes Elementary School in Burlington, Vt., where a successful Farm to School program delivers fresh produce directly from small, local farmers.

This Labor Day, lunchroom revolutionaries joined forces to host hundreds of fundraisers called “eat-ins” and raise the issue of school lunch reform.

According to a spokesperson from the U.S. Department of Education, Duncan sees a link between better lunches and better learning. “Feeding students nutritious, quality meals at school, and encouraging families to continue good eating habits at home, will be one of the strategies the Obama administration employs to promote learning and healthy living." In any case, this September, when Congress revises national standards for school lunches, there may finally be the political will to degrease the diets of our students. New York senator Kirsten Gillibrand is introducing legislation that would ban trans fat in school lunches.

What do you think? Should the Department of Education be as focused on salad bars as teacher salaries? Are legumes as essential as literacy? Or do you think the school lunch program should be administrated by the Department of Health and Human Services?

 

Carol Lloyd is a senior editor for GreatSchools and mother to two raucous daughters ages 5 and 9.

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Comments from GreatSchools.net readers

10/19/2009:
"I think getting kids to eat healthy begins at home because at the end of the day, even if the school served healthier lunches, the children won't eat them any way if that is not what they are used to eating. My son plays on a junior football league and you have to see the junk the parents give the kids on the field."
09/14/2009:
"I think to reform for better lunch food choices for the children while they are at school is imperative and long overdue. I like the approach the one person commented that for her child at their school they only can choose healthy foods, that the poor food choices aren't even availiable. I believe that is the way to go!!! And, I am so happy to know we have a first lady and presidential administration that is making this a priority. Thank you Michelle Obama & others that are working on this reform!!!"
09/11/2009:
"I can't agreed more! But before the cafeteria lunch will be improved, I have to take action with my own hands. I have been volunteering for my son's school since he was in pre-school that I spent lunchtime at schools with him at least once a week. I fliched at the greasy, out-of-the-can, cooked-to-death cafeteria food that my son had to eat. I would bring my own lunch or skid out (like the teachers) to subway or something for lunch. As a working mother who has to cooke also 2 meals a day and living in a cold climate most of the year, I strugged between whether making him cold lunch every day to bring to school and give up sleep or letting him eat less healthy but at least a warm meal from the school cafeteria. I chose the latter. Now he's entered first grade this year, with a bigger appetite and vocabulary to voice his opinion, he asked me after the first day of school, when the new cafeteria ran out of food, that he would rather bring his own lunch. I surveyed around seeing his classmates who either picked at the greasy black taco meat and skipped right to the cookie, or the ones who said they were still hungry. I decided to give up sleep. This way at least I can make sure my son has his daily nutrients in his lunch as much as I can. A satisfying and healthy lunch is such an important meal for a yound child's school day. Otherwise, by the time hw come home, he will snack anything in sight; and by the time dinner's served, his appetitie is already ruined. "
09/11/2009:
"That is why I pack my kids lunch daily. I visited my Kindergartner for lunch today and saw what the lunch looks like, it looks so processed and unnatural. Red drink filled with artificial colors and dyes. I couldn't even recognize the main lunch and sides as any food I have ever seen before."
09/10/2009:
"I think Children should be bringing their lunch to school more often than buying in the cafeteria anyway, you have a little more control that way. I have seen school lunches go much more 'green', offering my middle school child a salad option on a daily basis...besides the milk and water instead of soda..."
09/10/2009:
"the gov't and school should concentrate on teaching readingwriting and math and not what kids eat. If parents want them to have special diets or 'healthy' foods, then it's up to them to send the desired food if the cafeteria isn't serving what they prefer. "
09/10/2009:
"Good nutrition is the most important one we could give to the students for best performance. Healthy food is like a strong foundation over which anything built stands upright without falling apart. For students to learn the best, they should have proper nutritious food which cannot be stressed enough and all unhealthy foods should not even enter the school campus that includes not only fried ones even processed and packaged foods."
09/8/2009:
"Thanks so much for the link! One of our goals is to showcase the wide variety in food available to our kids at school. As you noted, some of it is pretty scary; some looks downright delicious; and the rest falls somewhere in between. If any teachers/parents/students here are reading, we'd love your photos to help us showcase what is possible in the world of school lunch. "
09/8/2009:
"I am pleased to say that my daughter's school offers only healthy options - and many of them. Kids can't help but eat healthy at that school! There aren't even any sweets or desserts."
09/8/2009:
"I like the idea of local healthy vegetables when available. I like the banning of sodas, fried foods, and candy. Granola bars and low-sugar foods in vending machines would be good. Keep the federal government out of the implementation. Keep it local. It will be more efficient and less intrusive."
09/8/2009:
"hooray! i'm thrilled to read about this tipping point. i think one of the biggest challenges will be cost: can we provide healthy lunches for the free/reduced lunch programs that serve meals for $1 and under a day? "
09/8/2009:
" Several years ago I was a cook for an elementry school. The bad lunches are mostly the fault of the cooks who do not care what they feed the kids. We brought our recipes from home and strifed to cook the best meals possible,considering we had to use a lot of goverment donated food.I had kids in other parts of the school system, their cooks had the same ingredients we had, and what they were feed was disgraceful.Veggie soup was all the leftovers from the previous days, my daughter even found grapes and pears in her soup! Todays cooks just open a can and throw it in the warmer, so they can do as little work as possible. "
09/8/2009:
"Yes, lunches could definitely use a makeover...but what about exercise?!?!? Growing up in grade school I had two recesses a day and PE twice a week. My first grader has one recess a day and PE once a week. Also, since her school is getting an addition, they've gotten rid of the playground equipment, so there's nothing to climb on and no swings. Schools need to allow more physical activity in addition to focusing on healthier foods. Exercise is as important as the foods your eating (and not eating!)"
09/8/2009:
"I think people don't realize how important healthy food, such as minerals in leafy greens, is to the learning process. The body's metabolic processes depend on good food, and those processes affect learning, mood, behavior, attitude, and the immune system - all major factors in education. But the importance of healthy food must be taught, because an 'unsupervised' child in a school lunchroom will make the choice about whether or not to eat the vegetables that are provided to him/her."
09/8/2009:
"I think school lunches need a makeover. My family is vegetarian, and my elementary age children cannot eat school lunches because there are no healthy vegetarian options. When I walk into the school, I see many fat children as young as 5 years old. It is sad and disheartening. Children cannot learn when they are not fed healthy food. "
09/8/2009:
"how can a parent help get better lunches in school for their children. Not only do they serve high fat junk to our children they only have a 15 minute recess break during an 8 hour day. How can they call that healthy... this is rediculous... they are our future... I remember 3 recesses and an 45 minute lunch...and we wonder why our children are stresses out...and obese...!"
09/8/2009:
"I am so glad to read this and am excited that we may be heading in the right direction!! But I also have to say - 'Duh!' and 'really?' to the idea that only now are people grasping the link between childhood obesity and diabetes rates. Come on people, wake up! We also need to bring recess and PE back into schools. There are lots of school districts that don't have recess as a part of the daily routine and PE has been reduced to 1-2 days a week at best in most areas. Is it any wonder that we have seen the overall health of our children decline?"
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