ariel75 said:
This issue is a joke! what you feed your own child is your own business i think this issue should be stopped now who do they think they are as far as i'm concerned make a mockery of the school and name and shame them as other people have said by contacting the local papers.
Agreed in this case (because this school doesn't have a clue...) AND beacuse wideeyes is obviously an intelligent and caring woman who looks after the health and wellbeing of her child.
But there are so many children out there who are not so lucky - whose parents just send them to school with a load of rubbish to eat (sweets, chocolates, crisps, fizzy drinks and chocolate spread sandwiches etc). Well the kids may think that they are lucky, but their bodies and their long term eating habits and health will not be so lucky... Some parents are just completely ignorant regarding the importance of good nutrition, others would rather take the "easy way out" (and let kids eat what they want, rather than get them into good habits).
I don't know, I am in two minds about this really:
- in some ways I think that it is good that schools take an interest in what kids eat: helping them to develop good healthy eat habits at an early age. Encouraging parents to provide nutritious food for their children.
- as some of you say... "don't interfer with what parents want to feed their kids" (if a parent wants to feed a kid rubbish, then let them). Why should I care about kids that aren't mine? Why should I worry about their health, possible obesity and lowered life expectancy?
I don't know... I guess that I lean towards the first (if I saw some random six year old crying in the street - with absolutely no-one around - I would go up to them and ask them what was wrong and try to help.... although I guess that us probably wrong these days - would probably get some parent yelling at me and end up arrested for talking to the child).
So I can see where the school is coming from, but I think that it needs some proper guidance in these matters. They need a clear policy and to be a "little" relaxed about it - a balanced diet is what is important. In the case of the OP's daughter. the school was SOOOOO wrong...
Boo