mommy*RN
<font color=limegreen>Does Imodium work for verbal
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2006
- Messages
- 3,383
I can't believe I just read this whole post. Whew!
My 2 cents...I have no problem keeping peanuts out of the classroom. When we bring snacks they are all peanut and tree nut free per the request of the classroom teacher. However I also know the teachers keep peanut and tree nut free items in the classroom so if someone brings a treat containing a no-no item the teacher can offer the allergic child an alternative that they can enjoy.
On the flip side...my DS is a picky skinny little eater. PB&J are his sandwich of choice. No, he won't starve if he doesn't have a PB&J sandwich for lunch, but he also needs to fuel his body to stay on task and learn in the afternoon. If I could find an alternative for him that he would eat I'd be happy to leave the peanut butter at home...so far everything I've tried has come back home (meat sandwiches, plain jelly, cheese, etc)
I wouldn't mind if someone made a "peanut" table at his school. I doubt he would be sitting alone there...peanut butter has been a child lunch staple for forever and a day.
I do think it would be near impossible for a school to go completely peanut free. I'm shocked there are schools out there that can label themselves that. There is no way on any given day there are not peanuts in those schools...a rogue snickers or an illicit pack of Ritz peanut butter crackers...there are peanuts in those schools. Kinda like those "Drug Free" schools that are on the evening news for a huge drug bust. I'd worry that the label of "peanut free" would give parents and children a false sense of security.
Good luck to the OP. I hope your childs sensitivity gets better and your school works with your family to an agreement both parties can live with.
Natalie
My 2 cents...I have no problem keeping peanuts out of the classroom. When we bring snacks they are all peanut and tree nut free per the request of the classroom teacher. However I also know the teachers keep peanut and tree nut free items in the classroom so if someone brings a treat containing a no-no item the teacher can offer the allergic child an alternative that they can enjoy.
On the flip side...my DS is a picky skinny little eater. PB&J are his sandwich of choice. No, he won't starve if he doesn't have a PB&J sandwich for lunch, but he also needs to fuel his body to stay on task and learn in the afternoon. If I could find an alternative for him that he would eat I'd be happy to leave the peanut butter at home...so far everything I've tried has come back home (meat sandwiches, plain jelly, cheese, etc)
I wouldn't mind if someone made a "peanut" table at his school. I doubt he would be sitting alone there...peanut butter has been a child lunch staple for forever and a day.
I do think it would be near impossible for a school to go completely peanut free. I'm shocked there are schools out there that can label themselves that. There is no way on any given day there are not peanuts in those schools...a rogue snickers or an illicit pack of Ritz peanut butter crackers...there are peanuts in those schools. Kinda like those "Drug Free" schools that are on the evening news for a huge drug bust. I'd worry that the label of "peanut free" would give parents and children a false sense of security.
Good luck to the OP. I hope your childs sensitivity gets better and your school works with your family to an agreement both parties can live with.
Natalie

takes time away from learning (thanks, NCLB), it is a huge disruption to the day, it is against school board policy, etc. Long before we stopped doing Halloween parties at my middle school, we had many children who didn't attend school that day because of religious purposes. 99% of those children were not Jehovah's Witness, but Christian.

