Is low participation
in school breakfast something your school struggles with?
Not exact matches
The Bacon Egg and Sausage
Breakfast Cups from Nicole at Daily Dish Recipes popped out at me as
something I could make with The Bug, but I wanted to turn it into a vegetarian recipe, so that he could take leftovers to
school (his preschool is attached to a Jewish Temple, so
in order to ensure that meals being rated together at a table are Kosher — since most of the students are not Jewish and may not know all of the requirements — is to just have everyone bring
in vegetarian dishes).
It is funny to me how
something as simple as making a big batch of pancakes, flash freezing them
in the freezer, and then heating them up for a hot
breakfast for the kids on a busy
school morning makes me feel like I could at least have part of the «supermom» cape.
Not only does fluorescently - hued Trix yogurt contain high fructose corn syrup, potassium sorbate, artificial colors and artificial flavors, it was actually
something of a poster child for bad
school food here
in Houston when HISD began serving it for
breakfast last year.
«What you've seen us doing on social media isn't necessarily
something we can do at every single
school, but we are able to test a recipe completely at a
school where
breakfast -
in - the - classroom is served,» Pettit explained.
First there is the convenience factor: with
breakfast being served
in classrooms after the first bell rather than before
school, no one has to get up earlier or get to
school earlier to get
something to eat before the
school day starts.
When I worked
in Berkeley's central
school kitchen a year ago one of the things that impressed me most was
something I'd never heard of before:
breakfast served
in the classroom.
When Assistant Superintendent Olivia Zepeda took over the Nutrition Services department
in Gadsden Elementary
School District # 32 she noticed
something right away about her
schools»
breakfast — students weren't eating it.
I've already mentioned that kids behave and perform better
in school once they've got
something in their bellies, but there are other benefits associated with
school breakfast — and with universal
breakfast in the classroom
in particular.
(Utah) Providing
breakfast for students with long bus rides, offering quick grab - and - go meals, or even serving food after the bell rings can effectively increase participation
in school breakfast programs —
something that can boost outcomes for low - income youth, advocates say.