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| [March 08, 2013] |
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State of the State on School Breakfast
ALBANY, N.Y. --(Business Wire)--
Anti-hunger advocates - including the New York School Nutrition
Association, Hunger Solutions New York and The American Dairy
Association and Dairy Council - marked the end of National School
Breakfast week by issuing the "State of the State on School Breakfast"
in Albany today. The result: New York is making progress - largely due
to efforts in Brentwood, Long Island and Syracuse City Schools - but
there's still a long way to go.
In fact, according to a report released in January by the Food Resource
and Action Center (FRAC), the Empire State ranks near the bottom of the
list (40th) when it comes to student participation in the
School Breakfast Program. According to Linda Bopp, Executive Director of
Hunger Solutions New York, low participation means missed meals for
hungry children and missed dollars for New York State. "Increasing
participation to 70 percent would lead to an additional 324,944
low-income children who eat breakfast each day, and New York State
school districts would receive more than $79 million in additional child
nutrition funding."
Anti-hunger groups aren't the only ones calling for New York to do a
better job in feeding hungry children. In January, Governor Andrew Cuomo
called out the need to increase participation in the School Breakfast
Program as a means to alleviate food insecurity and announced the
creation of an Anti-Hunger Task Force to help achieve this goal. Last
week, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack appeared at a forum on
childhood hunger to support Breakfast in the Classroom programs as a way
of reducing the stigma that can be associated with students having to
get to school early to eat breakfast in thecafeteria.
According to the FRAC report, moving breakfast out of the cafeteria
before school and making it a part of the school day is the most
effective strategy for increasing participation. Several options can be
adapted to fit the differing needs of age groups of students and of
particular schools, including delivering breakfast to the classroom, or
offering breakfast from carts in the hallway or after second period.
Changing up the traditional before-the-bell cafeteria breakfast helps
remove the perceived stigma of participating in school breakfast for
low-income children (especially older children), and alleviates the
problem of students missing breakfast in the cafeteria due to late
arrivals or lack of time in the morning.
Breakfast does more than feed bodies. According to a study from Share
Our Strength, kids who eat school breakfasts miss fewer days of school,
do better in math and are more likely to graduate high school.
In particular, students who eat school breakfast:
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Score 17.5 percent higher on standardized math tests
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Attend 1.5 more days of school
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Are 20 percent more likely to graduate from high school
Also, a report issued this week, The Wellness Impact: Enhancing
Academic Success Through Healthy School Environments1,
reinforces the "learning connection" - the crucial link between
quality nutrition, physical activity and academic performance. The
report was released by the GENYOUth Foundation, National Dairy Council
(NDC), American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM) and the American
School Health Association (ASHA).
Findings suggest:
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More than half (62%) of all teens say they do not eat breakfast every
day of the week.
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Breakfast eaters have better attention and memory than breakfast
skippers.
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Three-in-four high school students aren't active for the recommended
60 minutes each day.
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Students who were more active during school performed better on
standardized tests for reading, math and spelling.
Hunger Solutions New York is a statewide organization dedicated to
alleviating hunger for all New Yorkers. For more information,
visit hungersolutionsny.org.
The 55,000 members of the School Nutrition Association are the
nation's foremost experts on school meal programs. They are
dedicated to providing over 31 million children high quality,
nutritious, low cost school meals every day. SNA is the only
association dedicated exclusively to protecting and enhancing children's
health and well-being through school meals and sound nutrition education.
American Dairy Association and Dairy Council Inc (ADADC) is a
farmer-funded, farmer-directed non-profit organization. Representing
dairy farmers in New York, Northern New Jersey and Northeastern
Pennsylvania, ADADC is dedicated to promoting child health and wellness.

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