disney junky
BWV
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2004
- Messages
- 3,645
never mind....
our school serves tasty kakes....here in Pennsylvania
our school serves tasty kakes....here in Pennsylvania

AllNamesTaken said:If they denied the kids food, it's illegal. Call the school dept in your town to see who to file a complaint with. Tell your son if it happens again to pretend he's sick, go to the nurse and have her call you. Ask her to get the principal on the phone so you can send her to the cafeteria pronto!!
I agree. But if a diabetic child came back to class and told the teacher he hadn't eaten, the teacher would be aware of the potential dangers for him.C.Ann said:Teachers normally don't accompany their students to the lunch room - nor do they monitor their activities there - so unless the lunch room monitors are aware of each child's individual health issues, there could definitely be a problem concerning diabetic children..
C.Ann said:Teachers normally don't accompany their students to the lunch room - nor do they monitor their activities there - so unless the lunch room monitors are aware of each child's individual health issues, there could definitely be a problem concerning diabetic children..
yeartolate said:I agree. Before I started volunteering in class, I was not only given the allergy/illness for my son's class - but the entire grade. (3 -5 classes depending on the grade). Each teacher in each grade I voluteered in gave me the information.
I am also curious about the diabetics in the class (if any). I would assume they would bring their own lunch since they are so tightly controlled on their diet. I would think with a young child it would be a nightmare to allow cafeteria food.
------------------------disney junky said:I agree. But if a diabetic child came back to class and told the teacher he hadn't eaten, the teacher would be aware of the potential dangers for him.
Not to hijack the thread, but just for the sake of argument while we wait for the whole story, what would you do if you knew a student was severely diabetic but saw him eating Little Debbies for lunch? Would you have been able to restrict him?C.Ann said:------------------------
This is true - but the point is that it shouldn't be necessary.. There is no justification for not allowing children to eat lunch during the course of their school day.. I've worked in a school cafeteria myself and if we had attempted to deny a child food for any reason - let alone something as insignificant as being noisy - you can bet we would have been in hot water with a number of local and state agencies..
Wishing on a star said:YTL, Ummmmm, wrong again!!! There is nothing wrong with cafeteria food for a diabetic child. It is 'FOOD'. Now, withholding food, or giving them nothing but sweet sugary Debbie Cakes instead of food. HUGE problem.
Your attitude continues to disgust me.
I am sitting here giving thanks that it is not my sons class that you are involved with. I would have to say that your attitude and lack of knowledge about basic nutrition and health make me have serious doubts if you should be in any classroom.
yeartolate said:Are you intentionally trying to misunderstand me? It sounds like it. First of all, repeat after me, I do not condone using food as a punishment (or even reward) but I do not believe the partial witholding of a meal deserved the anger it got on this thread. Does that make sense. Before I spewed the venom at the principal or teacher, I would find out the particulars.
I said that I thought it would be difficult to manage a child's blood sugar with cafeteria food. It is vitally important to take exactly the amount of insulin you need for the amount of food you ingest. My point is that as a parent (heck, as a nurse!) I thought it could be very difficult to get the kind of consistency in cafeteria food you would need to keep tight control on your diabetes. As a nurse and a parent, I think it would be difficult to achieve optimal results with cafeteria food with a young child. Now if a cafeteria has constently proper food for diabetics and strictly enforces portion size, I might feel differently. Tight contol of diabetes has been found to prevent alot of very serious early and late complications of the disease - that is what I am concerned with. If that makes me a horrible person. I am .
LauraR said:Just wanted to let you all know that the vice principal left a message on my DH's answering machine saying that the 4th graders were able to get lunch. My DH was too busy at work to call back, but plans to tomorrow. We're in agreement that being sent through the lunch line in the last 5 minutes of lunch, when there is no lunch available and only snack items to buy is not "getting lunch." We just want to encourage the school to find other ways of discipline than withholding lunch.
By the way, I made sure to pack DS's lunch today!
----------------------------------disney junky said:Not to hijack the thread, but just for the sake of argument while we wait for the whole story, what would you do if you knew a student was severely diabetic but saw him eating Little Debbies for lunch? Would you have been able to restrict him?
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