As for kids sharing food - they do it all the time. "I'll trade my fruit roll-up for your cupcake..."
I'm not sure this is what we're talking about - more like, a mom shows up with 5 happy meals for her DD and her 4 best friends. That's just weird.
As for kids sharing food - they do it all the time. "I'll trade my fruit roll-up for your cupcake..."

I also wanted to add that when I was younger I would have been mortified to have my parents come and eat with me in the cafeteria. What happened to those days
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What wonderful memories! 
For some odd reason, it doesn't bother me that this would happen in a high school. But in an elementary school, it just doesn't seem necessary.
I am just saying, maybe there is a reason the parents bring in food for their kids. Could it be they want them to eat?
You mean there are kids that will only eat fast foods?
For some reason that question sounded like a shark circling potential prey!
sorry! I'm sure that isn't the case!I'm going to get smacked down for this and I realize this is JMO. But isn't school supposed to be a place to work and learn independence? Is having your mom bring you (and sometimes your friends) cooler food, sit with you through lunch and ensure your popularity preparing you for reality?

You mean there are kids that will only eat fast foods?

For some reason that question sounded like a shark circling potential prey!
sorry! I'm sure that isn't the case!

And I don't know about other places, but Mom's that sit with their kids though lunch everyday are NOT insuring popularity...they are pretty much guaranteeing it's NOT going to happen!![]()

I no smacka down nobody.
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I agree that school is a place to work through your independence, including your feelings of being left out on occasion and figuring out how to deal with that.
I wouldn't call McDonalds cooler food, lol. I pack my DD lunch, that's MUCH cooler food than eating the cafeteria offering but, last I checked, doesn't make her feel elitist. It makes her feel...uh...full?
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And I don't know about other places, but Mom's that sit with their kids though lunch everyday are NOT insuring popularity...they are pretty much guaranteeing it's NOT going to happen!![]()
I've never heard of this practice before so it must not be common here. I do know that if a child forgets his/her lunch at home the parent can bring it in but it must be left in the office and the child has to pick it up. Parents aren't allowed in the cafeteria to eat with their kids or bring them a special lunch. I wonder who makes the policy, is it by individual school, district, state??![]()
Anything that is brought in must be dropped off at the office. It has to do with the safety of the kids. I'm guessing that all school districts here have that policy but I'm not sure.That said, being judgemental in either direction is not going to help our kids, it only tells them that our way is the only way.
IMO.
I think it has a lot less to do with economical issues than social ones. Honestly, can't these parents wait until 3 o'clock to see their kids? School is for school, not a happy little lunch with a helicopter mom that can't stay away from Junior. Save the lunch for Saturday and let your kid have a whole day on his or her own.
But you have to teach kids something - one way or the other, they are going to get something from us. We can say, "Oh, there's nothing I can do about it - the world is just like that" or we can decide what we want the model to be for our kids and show it to them, live it for them.
I think it works. When you see a weird, catty cliquey lady in your office, you can bet she had a weird catty cliquey mom that taught her how to be weird catty and cliquey when she was just a little girl in grade school.
In elem school, I was always so jealous of kids that got to buy their lunch. My parents couldn't afford it so we had to take sandwiches. Everyone who bought lunch ended up at the end of the table because you had to sit according to where you were in line. Sack lunch kids sat at the head of the table. Believe me, cool kids don't bring their lunch (at least not at my school) so I sat with the "uncool" kids everyday.
I promise I'm not scarred for life. I still made friends and learned that life isn't always fair. Same as when Lunchables became popular and my mom refused to buy them for me because they were $ but the kids around me had them. Or the kids allowed to have 2 desserts and a Coke in their sacklunch.
Just part of life. Unless you make a uniform lunch that every child has to eat, there will ALWAYS be differences in what kids are getting to eat. Funny that is often the same argument used for school uniforms
(I will add that bringing pizza for a few kids isn't cool but bringing a special lunch for YOUR kid and eating with YOUR kid isn't a big deal, IMO)