Here's
the thing about school breakfast — about school meals in general, really — it's affected by (and affects) almost every other major issue in America today.
Not exact matches
One of the most impressive
things about Prince George's Public
Schools»
breakfast - in - the - classroom program is that it's managed to survive not one, not two, but three administrative changes in less than ten years, as well as quite a bit of principal turnover.
As much as it pains me to see kids at my boys»
school scarfing down Cheetos and Yoo Hoo for
breakfast, I don't want anybody to tell their parents that they CA N'T send those
things, or to make a big deal
about «supplementing» or anything else.
The media is a great way to get the word out
about the positive
things you are doing in your program to benefit children, and also the importance of the
School Breakfast Program.
If there's one
thing we have learned
about school breakfast, it's that there is no such
thing as «one size fits all.»
Here's how it came
about - I was lamenting on Instagram
about the note JJ's teacher sent home saying that he had eaten his entire lunch when he got to
school first
thing in the morning (and I'm not sure how that happened if they were keeping an eye on him and he had eaten a full
breakfast before he got on the bus...... but I regress).
Or maybe a foodservice staffer, or teacher, or
school administrator who has been dreaming
about a
breakfast program but a lack of funding has been putting
things on hold?
panel, where panelists discussed all of the great
things about serving
breakfast in the classroom: improved academic performance, reduced tardiness and absences, lower obesity rates, opportunities for growing
school food programs, and most important of all: it's the right
thing to do.