Please share this breakfast idea with your school

Kitchen and whatever 549

The article is “With one change, this school doubled the number of kids eating school breakfast.”* and I thought Frederick Douglass Elementary in Leesburg, Massachusetts, had an idea that ought to be passed on.

Less than 10 percent of students at Frederick Douglass Elementary in Leesburg were eating school breakfast last school year, and educators noticed the impact: Students were fidgety and cranky and sometimes had to leave class to see the school nurse because of stomach aches.

About one-third of the Loudoun County school’s students qualify for free- or reduced-price meals, but many of those children were not eating breakfast at school. The reason? Students were worried a sit-down breakfast in the cafeteria would make them late in the midst of the rush to get to class. Cathy Wilson, the school’s cafeteria manager, said she believed the bustling cafeteria was intimidating some students so much that they just didn’t want to walk in.

So Wilson came up with a solution: Let children grab their breakfasts and go straight to class with the meals.

The idea, implemented at the start of 2015, has had dramatic results. The number of students eating school breakfast has more than doubled from the start of last school year to this school year, going from 60 to 130.

The part about being late matters, but I’d say that much of the charm of this idea comes from the privilege of being able to eat in class. Why not, though? I let kids eat in class with the understanding that oranges and sticky or crumbly treats are not allowed. But the right granola bar or apple does not cause much mess. Frankly, even sticky treats could be fine provided teachers allowed time and kept the wipes necessary for clean-up.

I’d really like to throw my support behind first period breakfast. Hungry kids become cranky kids as the morning wears on. They become drifty kids. Sometimes they become sleepy kids. The days when the family sat down to a leisurely, sit-down breakfast before school are long gone for many families, if those days ever existed. We eat on a catch-as-catch-can basis regularly. McDonalds and Dunkin Donuts are counting on that drive-thru lifestyle. The result can be a pack of hungry kids who take the bus and did not quite make it to the cafeteria on time.

Do you work in a school? Why not bring this up in the teacher’s lounge? Are you a parent with a kid prone to stomach aches and morning disciplinary issues? Why not discuss this with school administration? A few crumbs and spills will create an extra bit of disarray as breakfast moves into the classroom, but the payoff in alert and focused students could prove worth the effort. Certainly, I’d be willing to try this experiment in my school. I strongly suspect the results would be worth the extra clean-up required.

* April 6 at 8:00 AM, this article can be accessed at the following site: https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/with-one-change-this-school-doubled-the-number-of-kids-eating-school-breakfast/2016/04/05/561089cc-fb47-11e5-80e4-c381214de1a3_story.html

Those 11.4 Million People Have Kids

Donald_Trump

Or they ARE kids. They have names like Cathy, Zugey, Arturo, Jack, Daisy, Jessica, Erendira, Esther, Fernando, Daniel, Maria, Evelyn, Michael, and Gabriela. They like sports and dancing. The little girls like to wear jewelry and clothes that sparkle, shoes that light up with each step. They are so proud of those shoes. The boys like to climb trees. They toss or kick balls back and forth to each other when the weather allows.

The United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has estimated that 11.4 million unauthorized immigrants lived in the United States in January 2012. According to DHS estimates, “the number of illegal immigrants peaked around 12 million in 2007 and has gradually declined to closer to 11 million

Those numbers represent another piece of social science estimation at best. Our illegal immigrants avoid the Census Taker. They sometimes give even their doctor a false name and address, a fact which drives an M.D. friend of mine nuts. Sometimes those test results reveal conditions that matter, but the patient with elevated sugar has vanished. Sometimes these families forego free breakfasts and lunches at school, plus any other programs that might force them to reveal their name and location. Families move often, too, as they chase jobs. The factory two hours away that pays an extra $1.22 per hour may result in both school and housing changes.

Let me be clear: The current presidential campaign is terrifying some of our immigrant children. Even those who are citizens are worried that mom and/or dad may be deported, taken away suddenly in the night. All the talk of building a wall along the U.S. southern border sounds threatening to these kids. What if family and friends are deported and can never return?

When we talk about sending these children “back” we are creating a fiction. These children can’t simply step into some previous life. Some of them don’t even speak the language of the country they might be sent “back” to. Many of them have few or no memories of that country. They are as American as any other kid on their block whose grandparents were born here. They have never seen an open air market. They shop at Target, Walmart or the mall. They have no clue how many pesos or quetzals a pair of new shoes might cost

Eduhonesty:  Scared kids become underachieving, disruptive students. They have trouble focusing, and may get up to wander the classroom often. They have trouble taking school seriously. Too often, they don’t dream the big dreams that might provide motivation to spend the evening studying. They don’t have enough confidence in the future to dream big dreams — or any dreams at all, sometimes.

I don’t know how to fix this problem but I thought I would lay it out on the table.

Helping middle-school students to manage stress

Donald_Trump

The advisory topic for the day was stress. I asked the kids how they managed stress. One boy reads. Another boy writes poetry. One eats. A number of boys and girls sleep. Sleep as a strategy appealed to most of them. Other students screensuck, mostly through gaming or social media.

We talked about recognizing stress, knowing our own personal tells. Those tells included twiddling fingers, tapping, and knuckle-cracking, mostly nervous hand gestures. We included gaming and eating. Sometimes kids knew when they were gaming or eating to make themselves feel better. We talked about recognizing depression as well, since stress and depression often travel hand-in-hand.

This half-hour advisory class will focus on stress for a couple of weeks. I like the idea. We started with time management, a big source of stress for middle school students and just about everybody today. If I don’t start my full day of grading of unit tests and other random assignments soon, I will definitely be stressed by tomorrow.

Eduhonesty: I’d recommend this advisory unit for middle schools across the country. Childhood has become terra incognita today, as evidenced by that post — was it just yesterday? — about first graders plotting to kill a classmate. Kids living in the Too Much Information Age learn too many scary facts and ideas before they can realistically process these facts and ideas, and I don’t know that we can shut this information flow down in any substantive fashion. I guarantee readers that some of my Spanish for Native Speakers students are running in fear of Donald Trump. They pretty much told me so yesterday.

“Why should I do all this work? Donald Trump’s just going to deport me when he is President!” My student said.

I don’t often hear excuses I have never heard before, but Trump as a reason to avoid classwork was new to me. The class laughed loudly. But the looks on their faces were not all entertained. The room sank into a more serious mood quickly. Whether there are ten or fourteen million illegal immigrants in this country, I guarantee readers many children in those families are not only stressed, they are living in fear.

As far as America’s “regular” kids go, the new show, “The Internet Ruined My Life” captures one reality that all these kids experience. Many of them feel one click away from disaster. Dumping your boyfriend or having a fight with your best friend has now become an event fraught with scary, potential consequences. What might that person share on social media? What pictures do they have?

Teaching stress and coping strategies ought to be obligatory topics that are regularly revisited in our students lives, even at the elementary level, at the expense of test preparation and other academic requirements. We keep pushing sex, sexual harassment and birth control discussions down into lower grades. We keep pushing academics down into lower grades. The teachers in the teachers lounge almost all agreed a few days ago that parents had to send their students to a local all-day kindergarten option, instead of the half-day option, because half-day students would be too far behind academically when they started first grade. (I was the lone vocal dissenter.) As we raise expectations at lower ages, we should teach healthy coping strategies for stress such as art, meditation, music and other relaxation techniques.

The poet and the reader in my advisory seem to have found healthy ways to manage stress overloads in their lives, but I naturally worry about my sleepers and eaters. Yahoo yesterday carried an article that said 1 in 8 adults on the planet is now obese. I don’t trust that source and if the actual number is 1 in 22.3, for example, I would not be surprised. But the big idea strikes me as real. The world is gaining weight nowadays.

And the reason has little or nothing to do with an increased food supply.