MARIETTA, Ga. - As Garin Hughes picks through his school-lunch burrito and unidentifiable apple-pear dessert, he has a secret. Hidden underneath the eighth-grader's right leg is a chocolate cookie in shrink-wrapped plastic. That's for dessert. In the past, his parents had no clue when he bought a treat at school. Now, thanks to a new school-lunch monitoring system, they can check over the Internet and learn about that secret cookie.
Health officials hope it will increase parents' involvement in what their kids eat at school. It's a concern because federal health data shows that up to 30 percent of U.S. children are either overweight or obese.
"My parents do care about what I eat. They try, like, to keep up with it," said Hughes, a 14-year-old student at Marietta Middle School.
Three school districts in the Atlanta area last week became the first in the country to offer the parental-monitoring option of an electronic lunch payment system called Mealpay.com, created by Horizon Software International of Loganville, Ga.
For two years, the payment system, used by 1,000 school districts in 21 states, has allowed parents to electronically prepay for student lunches. Students type in their identification number before the cafeteria cashier rings up each day's lunch bill. The bill then is deducted from the student's account.
The system was initially designed as a convenient way to make sure children bought lunch without worrying that lunch money would get lost, spent on other things or stolen.
However, these days parents increasingly are interested in what their kids eat away from home. It was requests from concerned parents that prompted Horizon Software to develop the online meal-monitoring option.
Under the system, parents can see all of a student's lunch purchases. Even those paid in nickels and dimes — instead of the prepaid lunch account — are recorded in the system, said Tina Bennett, program director.
"A parent could give a child $20 and within two days that money's gone. This allows them to see if they bought chips," Bennett said. "What we're really hoping is to get parents' involvement, to let them know what's happening."
Mary Carol Eddleman looked into what her daughter at a Hoschton middle school was buying and found she was getting an extra 12-ounce can of juice each day, even when a four-ounce bottle of juice came with lunch.
"That's about 150 extra calories a day. It's one thing if she did it occasionally, but she was getting in the habit of buying it every single day on top of lunch because her friends are drinking it," Eddleman said. "They drink it down like a Coke."
Eddleman talked to her daughter, who has since switched to buying a bottle of water instead.
"Any system that would help parents understand what's happening to their children's diets while at school ... undoubtedly will help by raising awareness to the problem," said Dr. David Ludwig, director of the obesity program at Children's Hospital Boston.
The biggest challenge for many school lunch programs, though, is "moving things clearly not good for kids out and making the choices more appealing," said Dr. Douglas Kamerow, an obesity expert at RTI International and a member of the Institute of Medicine panel that released a report on childhood obesity last fall.
"The problem in general is the a la carte system," said Kamerow, also a professor of clinical family medicine at Georgetown University. "Now you can buy french fries, chips and a Coke and it's called lunch."
Out of all the things that the daughter in question could have drank, the fact the parents are all pissy over a 12oz fruit drink... do they realise 4oz isn't that much? Thank fucking god I grew up when I did, and I won't be monitored by both my government and parents while trying to grow up.
Never mind spending all this cash on a complex system to track their kids digestive habbits, but not the quality of their education...
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 11:54 pm Posts: 12287 Location: Manguetown Gender: Male
Athletic Supporter wrote:
Just Justin wrote:
Wouldn't it just be much cheaper to offer healthier alternatives for lunch and encourage exercise in gym class?
More and more schools are eliminating soda and candy from their lunchrooms.
i know a lot of people who likes soda and candy and arent fat, the problem that the word moderation is not remembered by most americans when think in eat
_________________ There's just no mercy in your eyes There ain't no time to set things right And I'm afraid I've lost the fight I'm just a painful reminder Another day you leave behind
Joined: Sat Oct 16, 2004 10:51 pm Posts: 14534 Location: Mesa,AZ
Human Bass wrote:
Athletic Supporter wrote:
Just Justin wrote:
Wouldn't it just be much cheaper to offer healthier alternatives for lunch and encourage exercise in gym class?
More and more schools are eliminating soda and candy from their lunchrooms.
i know a lot of people who likes soda and candy and arent fat, the problem that the word moderation is not remembered by most americans when think in eat
This man speaks the truth.
_________________
John Adams wrote:
In my many years I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress.
Give me a fuckin break. I am a teacher and if our biggest problem in the publick school's was worrying about what some little fatt ass ate, we would be golden. We have so many more problems that are pertenent it is sick. This article seriously pisses me off!!
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 7:19 pm Posts: 39068 Location: Chapel Hill, NC, USA Gender: Male
I'm with Justin.
"Our kids are eating too much junkfood."
"Why don't we stop selling them junkfood."
"Fuck that! Let's say the parents have to watch it, not us. Then we don't have to take the blame when they blimp up!"
"Sweet! Let's print up a report of all the shitty stuff they eat and do nothing to prevent it!"
"Awesome!"
1) What if Kyle buys his girlfriend a twinkie and gets beat at home for it?
2) Why not just put webcams up at every lunch table, so parents can just watch their kids eat.
_________________ "Though some may think there should be a separation between art/music and politics, it should be reinforced that art can be a form of nonviolent protest." - e.v.
Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 4:43 pm Posts: 7633 Location: Philly Del Fia Gender: Female
Well it's good to see parents taking some responsibility. . . in the most ass way possible. The problem really isn't the extra snaks the kids eat at lunchtime at school. The school isn't taking the kids to Micky Dee's three nights a week and calling it dinner.
Maybe I shouldn't talk, because in highschool my lunch usually consisted of a coke, a bag of cheetos and a bag of sunchips - or the salt off of a soft pretzel and a candy bar.
But I got over it. I'm 97lbs, and pretty much eat psycohealthy.
How about properly educating our kids, and teaching them to make the right decisions on their own?
But the Ralph Wiggum thing sounds great, i'd get behind that.
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