(photo credit: http://indianapublicmedia.org)
Well, during my mom's stay, we had a conversation about the program my former school was enrolled in called: Breakfast in the Classroom (BiC). She had some very valid questions as to why my daughter doesn't participate. Questions like: What is BiC? What is served? How does it work? Who pays for it?
Let's start out with what it is.
What is BiC?
According to the website, www.breakfastintheclassroom.org, it seems so simple. You take the traditional school breakfast that was served in the cafeteria and serve it in the classroom. The reasoning is simple as well.
This is taken directly from the website:
"It’s a fact: eating breakfast at school helps children learn. Studies show that children who eat breakfast at the start of their school day have higher math and reading scores. They have sharper memory and show faster speed on cognitive tests. They have broader vocabularies. They do better on standardized tests. They focus better and behave better."
Now, how about this: How does it work?
(Please allow me to don my teacher hat to answer this question.)
Students are allotted a specific amount of time unpack and eat breakfast upon entering the classroom. This time limit varies from site to site. At my site, students have 20 minutes from the time the first bell rings.
Last but not least: What is served?
(Note: The teacher hat has been removed.)
Looking at the website, you see picture of children eating fruit and drinking milk and water. What is served, however, couldn't be further from that specific depiction. Out of five days in the school week, students are served only one hot breakfast. Since many schools in the district do not have operating kitchens (they can reheat food but not cook it), the food needs to be heated/cooked easily. On hot breakfast days students could be served breakfast pizzas, breakfast burritos, etc. Most days, students receive a cereal pack. This contains a small bowl of cereal like Trix, Cinnamon Toast Crunch, or Honey Nut Cheerios. The pack also contains a pouch of juice and graham crackers or goldfish crackers.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Armed with all of this knowledge, there is no way I could, in good conscience, send my then 7 year old daughter to school hungry. Sure, the school would feed her, but could I do it better??
On the left is what my daughter's school would feed her. On the right is a breakfast prepared in less than 7 minutes (yeah, I timed myself).
I get that this is a federally funded program and they want to feed our children cheaply and lessen their hunger pains. However, as a mom on a budget, I know first hand that eggs are cheaper than boxed cereal and fresh fruit is cheaper than juice. Well, if the school has a goal of helping children learn, they need to take a closer look as to what they give a child to put in their mouth.
--------------------------------------------------------------------Now fast forward three years. I've changed districts and my daughter has no choice but to do breakfasting the classroom. Why? I have to be at school by 6:45 which means my daughters are dropped off between 6:20 and 6:30. I can't feed my daughter at 5:30 and expect her to not eat until lunch.
This just increases my frustration over this program. We want our kids to perform at such high levels but we feed them crap. We want our kids to sit still and focus but we pump them full of sugar. There has to be a better way.
Tweets by @JackieMichele
No comments:
Post a Comment