Because kids nutrition can be confusing and dealing with fussy feeders and picky eaters can be overwhelming (I know this first hand!)
Not exact matches
I've spent so much of my journey focused on my own
nutrition and training, but
because so many mommies reach out to me for help with their own
kids & family I figured it was about time to expand my posts, stories, and recipes even more.
I love pancakes
because you can sneak
nutrition into them, or serve them with fruit and you know your
kids will walk away with full, happy bellies.
Probably
because that kind of change is hard, and demonizing the little guy — the local student
nutrition director and local radio DJ last year, or the small restaurant operator and local school superintendent this year — is easier and less risky than taking on the real «bad guys» — the elected officials, the giant Agribusiness players, the networks that broadcast all of those fast food and junk food ads to our
kids and also, oh yes, broadcast Jamie Oliver's shows....
Because the school lunch program is a key area where our children get their
nutrition, why not look how other countries successfully feed their
kids in the school lunch program as examples to use for improvement.
«Our scholarship stories highlight how important it is for us to provide education for our members,
because whether they are pursuing an associate's, a bachelor's, or an advanced degree, each and every one of them has a passion for what they do — for feeding
kids,» explained Janet, who believes when it comes to school
nutrition gaining respect as a true profession for passionate individuals — «the time has come».
I studied
nutrition for a number of years and i know
kids who are obese
because they were given solids / semisolid foods too early!!!
Perhaps the reason people didn't worry so much about naming their
kids back in the day was
because they knew the likelihood of them living past infancy was pretty slim - so they worried more about being able to provide
nutrition and shelter instead.
On Friday, in a speech to the Partnership for a Healthier America — a private - sector group set up to push the administration's
nutrition objectives — the first lady said: «
Because of what we have all done together, today, 32 million
kids are getting healthier school meals.
Parents can feel good about this fact
because these meals are healthier than ever, which means that
kids get the good
nutrition they need to learn and do their best in school.
«I stayed in child
nutrition because I liked the hours; I had three
kids, and could be home when they were home,» Tate recalled.
Plus the
kids that have to eat at school do so
because of low income and they are most likely not getting good
nutrition at home due to lack of parental involvement.
Some aren't well educated about
nutrition; others opt for highly processed packaged food
because they're busy; still others just give their
kids whatever they want to avoid a fight.
It seems like everything I try to do (teach
nutrition, organize parents, talk to
kids about what they are eating, etc.) is viewed as unprofessional??? I can live with an unsatisfactory in professionalism
because I know I'm doing the right thing and I don't want to give up, but what's teacher to do?
Your
kids wouldn't be too grateful to you, if you told them that you had willingly fed them with inferior
nutrition, and that they will healthily live up to 100 years in solitude,
because they are small.
And parents don't generally pick up the slack and teach
kids nutrition because they were never taught about it either.
There isn't a
kid in the world who won't eat toast and getting creative with bread is all the rage so why not add some Similac Go & Grow to it to help amp up those
nutrition facts and
because it's flavorless it's no problem!
If your
kid isn't eating his broccoli for dinner, do you insist that he does, night after night, and endure the drama that such strictness entails,
because you know that the long - term benefits of good
nutrition are worth it?