I am not trying to be rude but you do not have to pay that price. You can simply just not participate in the Dinning Plan. If I recall correctly there was a ton of talk last year about how unhealthy the childrens menu was and how children needed better choices then the usual fare like hotdogs, burgers, and fires. So Disney offers healthier choices and now they have another group of patrons who are upset. People keep referring to lot of choices but a childs menu is limited most places you go. GO look at a menu from some of your chain restaurants. They all include the same thing. The only restaurant with a child's menu that really impresses me is Chillis.
This is absolutely true

If the problems with the kids' meals outweigh the benefit and enjoyment your family will get from the DDP, then it's not going to be a good purchase for you. You have to make the best decision for you, as a consumer. (And if you got the
free dining offer...STOP COMPLAINING, IT'S FREE! We all would like to be so lucky!

)
If a family was NOT on the DDP and didn't like the kids' menus, what would they do? They would purchase adult menu items instead (at a much higher cost), and/or they would share their own often huge meals with their kids. Some people have asked about upgrading their 10 year old to an adult on the DDP, but unless you have a 10 year old gourmet or linebacker, it's really hard to justify the additional $28 a day it would cost -- not to mention the cost of upgrading your child's ticket to an adult ticket.
So, if your family wants the DDP but you are not happy with the choices/variety/volume of food for the kids' meals, there are several simple solutions:
1. Choose your CS restaurants carefully. Read the menus ahead of time to know if your kids will like what's there. Don't just pick a CS based on adult appeal, only to find out your kids hate both entrees on the menu. Not all CS meals are the same choices, some are better, and the TS meals are better yet.
2. Plan on a buffet or character meal every day. Your kid will be getting an "adult" meal for the kids' price. Enjoy this perk while you can, because once they turn 10, you will have to pay the adult price for them anyway, and it isn't cheap

Along the same lines, patronize the few CS restaurants that don't even offer a kids' menu, and your child will be able to pick from the adult choices.
3. Order what's on the kids' meals anyway for what your child
will eat -- your child may like the CS entree (especially if you choose the restaurant with them in mind), can eat the sides, will definitely drink the beverage. The snack credit is never a waste. The TS menus are definitely better for kids, and of course there are always those buffets.
4. Ask for a substitute for the sugar free Jello (try, "Do you have a kids' dessert without artificial sweeteners? My child can't have them."). Ask politely with a smile. The worst they can say is "Sorry, no substitutions." Many menus specifically state "fries and soft drinks on request", so you can always ask to sub those, too.
5. Share some of your meal with your children. A LOT of people have said there is just too much food for them to finish, or that a family of 4 routinely shares 3 CS meals amongst themselves. Many parents have said they order a double cheeseburger, order a second bun for less than $1, and split it into two sandwiches that way.
6. Buy your children an extra treat if they want it -- you are at
Disney World, for goodness' sake! You don't even have to pay OOP -- use a snack credit. Again, a LOT of families report they have leftover snack credits at checkout, so use them up during your trip. Worst case scenario? You will run out of snack credits, thereby getting your money's worth, and will have to pay OOP for Dole Whips on your last day.
7. Call, write, or email Disney to express your displeasure with the kids' meals as they are. Expect a canned answer, but if you are contacted by phone by someone who will actually listen, make sure you've done your research and are able to give them facts and specific examples (ie "CS restaurants A, B, and C only offer sugar-free Jello; we don't think that's healthy, and would like an alternative for our kids"). If you make broad statements that may not be entirely true -- "The only thing listed on any of the childrens' menus is chicken liver tacos with a side of brussel sprouts, and my little princess will have a fit!"

-- they will not take you seriously. I
know; I work in customer service
