trymahjong Posted March 30, 2014 Share Posted March 30, 2014 (edited) http://www.chron.com/news/health/article/Schoolkids-toss-up-to-70-percent-of-fruits-5347755.php The article brings up stats concerning waste increase when more fresh fruit/veggies are added to kids cafteria lunches (required in new Federal guidelines)- but I liked this little thought provoking nugget : "They found that a few more kids did eat produce when it was given to them, but the new policy dramatically increased schools' lunch costs and the waste in their cafeteria trash cans. When the same researchers offered kids a small incentive, such as a quarter or even a nickel or raffle ticket, as a reward for eating produce, more kids made healthy choices and schools saved money and cut trash." Edited March 30, 2014 by trymahjong Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IronTiger Posted March 30, 2014 Share Posted March 30, 2014 Personally, I think that they shouldn't force kids to take fruit at all and bribing them with trinkets is a bad way to foster a healthy habit. Also, if schools are still doing fresh fruit the way they were doing it in the late 1990s and early 2000s, they'll seemingly get the cheapest, nastiest oranges or the bitterest, hardest apples they can find. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Subdude Posted March 30, 2014 Share Posted March 30, 2014 I don't see anything terribly wrong with bribing the nippers to eat their greens. It has to be more effective than trying to teach'em nutrition basics. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
towerjunkie Posted March 31, 2014 Share Posted March 31, 2014 In my opinion this isn't the best idea for one thing it just makes kids eat this just for the benefit of 5 extra cents in their pocket. I think it's truly up to the parents who should discipline their child's eating habits early on so that they make the choice of choosing the orange over the double chocolate brownie and if they want the brownie they should learn to set a goal such as, if I eat one orange a day I can have one brownie at the end of the week. As for the actual produce in school lunches, I have experienced this first hand and yes, school lunches don't provide the sweetest oranges or the softest apples, heck the only credible item would be the oak farms milk pints. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nate99 Posted May 5, 2014 Share Posted May 5, 2014 Are they going to change the federal guidelines that makes the feedstock for high fructose corn syrup a costless byproduct of federal agriculture subsidization? Nothing is so dumb as a good intention. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KristinDaugherty Posted May 5, 2014 Share Posted May 5, 2014 Parents' job, not the school district's. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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