After years of working in school districts and school kitchens, it's clear to us that the majority of
school food change begins with parents who care about their children's nutrition at home and at school.
Not exact matches
Last week I announced that I and a team of
school lunch reform luminaries — Janet Poppendieck, Mrs. Q, Chef Ann Cooper, Ed Bruske, and Dr. Susan Rubin — are going to band together to answer a Lunch Tray reader's simple yet profound question — how does one parent
begin to bring about
change in
school food?
Yesterday I announced that I and a team of
school lunch reform luminaries — Janet Poppendieck, Mrs. Q, Chef Ann Cooper, Ed Bruske, and Dr. Susan Rubin — are going to band together to answer a Lunch Tray reader's simple yet profound question — how does one parent
begin to bring about
change in
school food?
-LSB-...] Note: Recently a Lunch Tray reader asked a very basic question — how can one parent
begin to
change school food?
-LSB-...] a Lunch Tray reader asked a very basic question — how can one parent
begin to
change school food?
Cooking up
Change began in Chicago in 2007 as a way to involve a student voice in the national conversation about
school food.
But it is not just breakfast and lunch menus that have
changed; vending machine options, a la carte lines,
food - based fundraising practices, and more are being improved to meet the updated
school nutrition rules that
began to take effect in the 2012 - 13
school year (SY).
I recently announced that I and a team of
school food «superheroes» — Janet Poppendieck, Mrs. Q, Chef Ann Cooper, Ed Bruske, and Dr. Susan Rubin — are banding together to answer a Lunch Tray reader's simple yet profound question — how does one parent
begin to bring about
change in
school food?
As we
begin a new
school year, Vermont
schools are leading the way in providing fresh, local
food to children in creative ways, thus
changing how a generation of children experience their
school cafeteria, their learning, and their health.»
Note: Recently a Lunch Tray reader asked a very basic question — how can one parent
begin to
change school food?