31 answers

Does Your School Require That You Eat Your Lunch?

Hello there, I have kind of a strange question about elementary schools and if your particular schools requires the kids who purchase hot lunch to eat "x" amount of bites before they can leave for recess? For example say the school lunch for the day is....hot dog on bun, mac n cheese, orange wedges, green beans, milk. Say you child doesn't like the schools hot dogs but likes everything else they are having that day, does your school tell your child they have to have x # of bite (whatever their age is) before they can go out for recess and if they don't they get a check mark or discipline slip, etc.

If your school does, what do you think of that, tell me why you agree or not and where you live?????

I am getting the does your school really do that....apparantly they do. I asked my DD this am why she was bringing her lunch and she said she doesn't like the hot dog wrap I said well they are having mac n cheese and other stuff and she said they make them eat the hot dog wrap...not the other stuff it's ok not to eat that but the "main" part being the protein part they require # of bites for the age and they cannot go out for recess til they do or they get a check mark. I can't even begin to tell you how wrong I think that is.

What can I do next?

Featured Answers

I don't agree with that AT ALL. Hello, childhood obesity! It's me the lunch lady, I have a new crop of kids for you.

No-one should be forced to eat something when they're not hungry for it.

And no, my kids' school does not require this.

4 moms found this helpful

I've never heard of a school doing that how weird. I'm really strict with my daughter but I wouldn't like her to go to a school where they would tell her how much she HAS to eat. I know a lot of parents feel like a "happy plate" is a good thing but I think it just helps contribute to obesity when you force a kid to eat after they're full. So to actually tell them they can't go to recess where they can get needed exercise is upsetting after making them eat more then they wanted! Good question :]

2 moms found this helpful

I would talk to the school, I am a firm believer that the fasted way to create food issues in children is to make food an issue. I would be angry if they forced my child to eat things they do not like or want to eat.

1 mom found this helpful

More Answers

I don't agree with that AT ALL. Hello, childhood obesity! It's me the lunch lady, I have a new crop of kids for you.

No-one should be forced to eat something when they're not hungry for it.

And no, my kids' school does not require this.

4 moms found this helpful

Sounds ridiculous. I teach at three different school in my county and have worked at two others within this county. I have also taught in two other counties in TN and two counties in SC. Never heard of this before! Check to see if its a county wide rule. I'm willing to bet it's not. Then you can push the subject more easily as you have the backing of the county rules. Some things are left to the discretion of principals or teachers. It may be an individual teachers rule- much easier to fight than principal or county rules.
All in all, it is your child and your rules as long as they don't interfear with eduction. Telling a child how much or what to eat is not a schools job. One of my girls has an allergy to anything cow, not just the sugars in the milk. She's allergic to the proteins so it affects even cooked food. No one better punish her for not eating something at school!

4 moms found this helpful

A lot of food at our elementary school goes in the trash.

As a substitute teacher, I often have lunch duty. Our lunchroom has an ice cream machine, if parents say ok and send $$, the children can get ice cream. That said, the only "rule" we folllow is if someone wants ice cream, they must have eaten most of the meal, not just a couple of bites. I usually say something like this when a child requests ice cream "Would your mom let you get ice cream if you only ate this much? " Most of the time, they go back and finish the meal.

I would not like the RULE for everyone to eat everything. Some kids might not be starving, might not like something. I am one who does not force someone to eat everything on the plate. I encourage healthy eating and I think discipline for not cleaning a plate is setting someone up for issues later.

3 moms found this helpful

Our school does not do that, and I am glad they don't. Of course, I would like my kids to eat more of their fruits/veggies at school, and I HATE to think of all the food they waste. But, I think it is important that children learn to listen to their bodies and stop eating when they are full. Different children require different amounts of food, and I think forcing a child to eat beyond hunger is just teaching them unhealthy habits. Considering the growing rate of childhood obesity, I think the school needs to reconsider their policies on this. I would prefer that our school allow children to decline certain foods at the time of serving. Even though I don't think my son would ever have a veggie on his tray, at least it wouldn't be tossed in the trash at the end of lunch.

3 moms found this helpful

I have never heard of that. It is wrong on so many levels. Does your school really do that?

2 moms found this helpful

No our school does not do that. I would be highly irritated if they did. My 3rd grader is a vegetarian. She would not touch the hot dog. She would eat everything else, probably, but the decision on how what and how much she eats is up to her. Our school does offer smaller portions (whole or half of a hot dog), and ask the kids what side dishes they would like on their plates so there is less waste. It is a rare kid that would like every entree and every side dish from every school hot lunch. We also have a fruit and veggie bar, so here again, they have more of their own choice, and portion control. I wonder if that is really a school policy or some very controlling cafeteria staff. I get that there is a lot of waste, but there are better ways to reduce if it is a waste concern than micromanaging the number of bites of food elementary aged children eat.

2 moms found this helpful

My son is in public school in Lewisville TX and they do not require that he eat most or really any of his meal, most of the time he complains that by the time he's out of the lunch line he has less than 5 minutes to eat so usually the teachers are making him throw his food away even though he isn't done eating.

I went to catholic school as a kid and I remember the nuns standing by the garbage cans inspecting plates and the lectures about starving children in Africa. These women were missionaries so most of them knew about the starving children in Africa personally, so I ate everything regardless of if I liked it or not.

2 moms found this helpful

I've never heard of a school doing that how weird. I'm really strict with my daughter but I wouldn't like her to go to a school where they would tell her how much she HAS to eat. I know a lot of parents feel like a "happy plate" is a good thing but I think it just helps contribute to obesity when you force a kid to eat after they're full. So to actually tell them they can't go to recess where they can get needed exercise is upsetting after making them eat more then they wanted! Good question :]

2 moms found this helpful

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