School meal

The principal of Nauru Secondary School inspecting school lunches (2012)
A school lunch in Washington, D.C.

A school meal or school lunch (also known as hot lunch or school dinner or even breakfast) is a meal, typically in the middle or beginning of the school day, provided to students at school. All countries all over the world have one or the other kind of school meal programme. Millions of children from all standards and grades get their meals at their respective school everyday. Scientifically and medically school meals are regarded as a very essential component for the upbringing and growth of children. School meals provide high energy food with high nutritional values for free or at economical rates. The benefits of School meal varies from country to country. While in developed countries the school meal is a source to provide nutritious meals, in developing countries it is an incentive to send children to school and continue their education. However, in underdeveloped countries school meal would mean food security at the times of crisis, school meal would form a base to support children to become healthy and productive adults, thus breaking the cycle of poverty and hunger. In all the cases school meal allows the children to focus on their studies.

Trends, nutritional values and economics have influenced menus. In recent years, some schools have served breakfasts in the morning before school starts. Sweden, Finland, the Czech Republic and Estonia are among few countries which provide free school meals to all pupils in compulsory education regardless of their ability to pay.[1][2]

A free school meal is a school meal provided to a student during a school break at no cost. Some countries, such as Sweden, Finland and Estonia, provide these to all school children regardless of their ability to pay.[3] Many governments in developing countries are increasingly implementing free school meals to improve attendance rates and reduce malnutrition, through school feeding in low-income countries.

In high income countries, free school meals are usually available to those who are eligible - because they come from lower socioeconomic backgrounds (with the exception of Australia where free school meals are not available). Reduced price meals are also available in some countries to those who need a degree of assistance with costs (in countries such as the Republic of Ireland, France, Italy, Hong Kong, Japan and the U.S.A.).[4]

A problem with free school meals when they are not provided to all students is that they can be seen as stigmatising to those pupils who are eligible; studies have shown that many of those entitled to free meals do not take them and it can have a negative effect on those that do. Another problem is that not all those children who could benefit from the scheme qualify for it. Organisations such as the Child Poverty Action Group have called for school meals to be made free for all pupils to tackle the problems mentioned above. In the United States of America, tests of these free-school-meal-to-all programs have been funded by Share Our Strength in some school districts.[5]

History

Growing results of obesity in children has encouraged the government to provide healthier, more balanced school lunches. In the United Kingdom, significant changes have been made from when school meals were introduced in the 19th century. 1941, was when the first National School Meals Policy was published across the United Kingdom. This meant the first nutritional boundaries were set. The balanced meals now including the appropriate levels of protein, fat and calories.[6]

European Countries

United Kingdom

In 1944 it was made compulsory for local authorities to provide school dinners, with legal nutritional requirements. The government paid the full cost of school meals in 1947.[6] Free school meals were available to children with families on very low incomes.[7] As a result, staple traditional "school dinner" foods became embedded in the national psyche from the 1950s onwards. "School puddings" in particular refers to desserts traditionally (historically) served with school dinners, in state and private schools. Examples include tarts such as gypsy tart and Manchester tart and hot puddings such as spotted dick and treacle sponge pudding.[8]

In the 1980s Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government ended entitlement to free meals for thousands of children, and obliged local authorities to open up provision of school meals to competitive tender. This was intended to reduce the cost of local-authority-provided school meals, but caused an enormous drop in the standard of food being fed to children. A 1999 survey by the Medical Research Council suggested that despite rationing, children in 1950 had healthier diets than their counterparts in the 1990s, with more nutrients and lower levels of fat and sugar.[9]

This became a major topic of debate in 2004 when chef Jamie Oliver spearheaded a campaign to improve the quality of school meals. School dinners at state schools during this time had normally been made by outside caterers. The schools sold a lot of deep-fried fast-food like chips, fried turkey nuggets, pizza and pies. After the programme was shown on Channel 4 (Jamie's School Dinners), sections of the public showed support for the increase of funding for school meals, causing the government to create the School Food Trust. The topic became a factor in the 2005 UK general election. Martha Payne's blog, NeverSeconds about the quality of school meals at her primary school in Lochgilphead made national headlines, after gaining support from Jamie Oliver.

From September 2014 all infant pupils in England's schools are entitled to a free hot meal at lunchtime every day, an initiative of Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg who launched the plan at the Liberal Democrats conference in 2013. The government are paying £2.30 for each meal taken by newly eligible pupils. The Scottish government will provide free school meals for all children in Primary One to Three from January 2015.[10] Older children only get free meals if their family gets a qualifying benefit:[11]

The National Union of Teachers is keen to see free school meals for all children. Fiona Twycross has been campaigning to persuade the Labour Party to commit to the universal policy on the basis that according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies and the National Centre for Social Research free school meals for all significantly increased attainment in schools.[12]

Entitlement to Free School Meals is used as a measure of deprivation by the government. A premium of £1,300 for primary-aged pupils or £935 for secondary-aged pupils is paid for each eligible child to the school for the financial year 2014/5. 11% of families entitled to free meals do not claim them - which means that their schools do not receive the extra funding. It is unclear how this will be affected by the introduction of universal free meals for the youngest children.[13]

The Chartwells catering company which supplies meals to schools in Dorset was threatened with litigation over its failure to provide hot meals after a fire at one of its kitchens.[14]

Estonia

Free school dinners are served in elementary and secondary schools.[2]

Estonian food pyramid.

At the lowest tier of the Estonian food pyramid is water and exercise. The next tier up is recommended to be the largest part of any meal. This includes starches, fruits and vegetables. The middle section of the pyramid includes diary products and meat. This tier is advised to be consumed in small portions on a daily basis. Second from the top of the pyramid includes oils, butter and nuts. Right at the peak of the pyramid includes ice-cream, soft drinks, honey and biscuits which are all products high in sugar and are considered a treat when consumed. [15]

Finland

A typical Finnish school lunch served free of charge to all pupils.

Finland provides free catered hot school meals to all pupils from pre-primary to upper secondary education every school day, as guaranteed by legislation [16] starting from 1948.[17] Basic Education Act (628/1998) [18] states "A pupil attending basic education shall be provided with a balanced and appropriately organised and supervised meal on every school day." (Section 31, Free education). Free school dinners were offered already in the beginning for the 20th century in some cities to poor people (e.g., from 1902 in Kuopio, extending to all students in 1945).[19]

According to Finnish National Board of Education statistics from the year 2014, average school meal per school day per student at basic education was valued to 2.80 euros making of total 532 euros during one school year per student.[20] The sum includes ingredients, labor costs, kitchen equipment and other fixed expenses but no property costs nor taxes.

Children taking part in before- and after-school activities are also served a free healthy snack.[21]

Also the lunches in higher education (universities, polytechnics etc.) are subsidized in Finland. Kela, the Social Insurance Institution of Finland, compensates student meal that fulfill the nutritional and pricing criteria for government meal subsidies.[22] The purpose of this is to promote positive health and nutritional trends among students. Special dietary needs – whether in connection with religion, ethical beliefs or health issues – are accommodated without extra costs.

Free school meals in Finland are seen as an investment for the future; the aim is to maintain and improve the health, well-being and learning of children.[23] The school meal is used as a pedagogical tool for teaching table manners, food culture and healthy eating habits as well as for increasing the consumption of vegetables, fruits and berries, full corn bread and skimmed or low fat milk.[24][25]

National and local regulations form the basis for Finnish school meal practices. Education acts and decrees[18][26][27] along with national core curricula[28] and local curricula are central documents governing school meals.[29] Local and school-level curricula define the central principles of arranging school catering. The curricula also describe the objectives for education in health, nutrition and manners. The health-related and social role of school meals, the objectives of nutritional education and learning of manners as well as the recreational aspect of lunch breaks are taken into account when arranging school meals and snacks. Students are allowed at least 30 minutes for eating, after which they have a short recess outdoors.

School meals generally consist of typical Finnish foods. A basic school meal consists of a warm main course, vegetables, bread, table spread and a drink.[30] The school lunch is calculated to equate about one third of a child’s daily food intake. School catering is designed to follow the dietary guidelines for schools issued by the National Nutrition Council.[31] The recommendations for school meals are being updated during year 2016.

Normally, the lunch is provided at school canteens like a buffet, where pupils serve themselves as much as they want. A model plate is often used to guide eating habits towards the recommendations:

See example of school menus for six week rotation for city of Helsinki from this link.

Children with special dietary needs – whether in connection with religion, ethical beliefs or health issues – are entitled to a special diet without costs. The goal in designing school menus is that the basic menu would be suitable for most students, with minor adjustments if needed. To ensure food safety and the elimination of possible cross-contamination, specific information on the child's dietary needs is required. In the case of health-related special diets, the assessment of a doctor, nurse or dietitian is needed.[34]

Similarly to school lunches before- and after-school snacks are used as a pedagogical tool in teaching children about proper nutrition, table manners and food culture. Snacks are designed to offer variety and take into consideration Finnish Nutrition Recommendations [21] as well as children’s individual needs.

School meals are designed to support learning in connection with health, nutrition, food culture and table manners. One of the basic things is co-operation between students, headteachers, teachers, parents and catering staff. In many schools, students participate in the work of the school canteen during their working life practice period. Most schools have a school meal committee where students, teachers and catering staff develop school catering together. Most schools also welcome parents to come and taste school meals. There are always adults present in the school restaurant. The pedagogical role of the school catering staff is seen as important as well as teachers' knowledge of nutrition. Finland is developing school meal and nutrition education for teachers, and pedagogical education for school catering personal.[35]

There is no national accreditation system to evaluate school lunch quality in Finland. However, by the end of 2015 over 200 schools have been awarded the The School Lunch Diploma. The diploma certifies the school's commitment to the national standards and recommendations set for nutritionally, educationally, and ecologically sustainable school lunches.[36] It also is indication of excellent collaboration among interest groups within the diploma school. The School Lunch Diploma is coordinated by the Finnish Kitchen Professionals Association.

School lunches can also be channel for local food production empowerment. Introducing locally produced fish to the offerings of institutional kitchens, such as school canteens, is an ethical and ecological alternative to mass-produced meat or imported fish[37]

Italy

Since Italy has a culture with emphasis on food the school meal follows the regular Italian cuisine, although it may vary from region to region and from town to town. The Italian government is very "down to people" and are doing a larger scale study to measure and involve students in food habits, diets and choices regarding food.[38]

Sweden

School dinner has been free in Swedish elementary and secondary schools since 1973.[39] The government or municipality covers all charges. Normally, the lunch is prepared like a buffet, where pupils serve themselves as much as they want (mainly potatoes/rice, meat/fish and vegetables). Milk and water are usually offered as drinks. There is also other alternatives as Vegetarian food, or religious choices. All special food is free of charge. The catering is usually signed with a private contract, for each city. Much of the products are imported, but still have a good standard. In many schools the teacher or principal eats with the pupils. That is because Swedes believe that it creates a stronger connection.[40] In Swedish schools there are also international food weeks, or vegetarian weeks.

Denmark

School lunches in Denmark may include items such as fruit, roasted duck, potatoes and red or white cabbage.[41]

Norway

Norwegian school lunch was supplied from Sweden during World War II, partly privately financed. Later all public school lunches were discontinued, so most Norwegians bring a packed lunch. In 2007 one free fruit a day was introduced for all pupils in grades 8–10. Subsidized milk is sold at schools.

France

In France, lunch is considered the most important meal of the day. Students can get lunch at school or go home for it. The lunch break is one to two hours long. French students are taught to take time to savor and enjoy their meals.[42] Students have to pay for the cafeteria lunch; the cost of the meal varies by region. The price of a meal is based on family income; students pay for half of the meal, while the school pays for the rest of it. For example, a typical meal may cost $6, with the family paying $3 instead of the full price.[43]

In the 1970s, the French government began to take steps to improve school lunches. The government guidelines for French schools date back to 1971. The 1971 food recommendation guideline stated that each meal should contain raw vegetables, such as salads and fruits; protein in the form of milk or other dairy products; cooked vegetables twice per week; and carbohydrates on the remaining days.[43] The 2001 food recommendation guideline, signed by the minister for national education, stated that the school lunches must be healthy and balanced. The guideline stated that there should be very little fat in the menu and meals must contain vitamins and minerals. Menus are posted for parents; they vary each day. The main course must contain meat, fish or eggs.[42]

The cafeterias serve five-course meals, even for preschoolers.[44] Schoolchildren eat the same things as adults.[45] A school lunch in France contains an appetizer, salad, main course, cheese plate, and dessert.[44] Bread may accompany each meal. A menu might include potato leek soup, carrot and bean salad, lamb with saffron, an assortment of cheeses, and grapefruit. Each meal is accompanied with water. French schools do not have vending machines.[46]

Asian Countries

East Asia

China

A typical school lunch in the People's Republic of China may include items such as white rice, fish, potato and onion mix, and green beans.[41]

South Korea

A South Korean school lunch

School lunches in South Korea include traditional foods like rice and kimchi (fermented cabbage).[47] Other dishes that may be served include sesame leaves stuffed with rice and covered with honey sauce; pumpkin potato soup; a pancake made of egg batter and green onions, with optional peppers and octopus; and a cucumber-and-carrot salad.[47]

In most schools, the students set and hand out the various dishes, and then clean them up. (Like Japan.)

Japan

The tradition started in the early 20th century. After World War II, which brought near-famine conditions to Japan, the provision of school lunches was re-introduced in urban areas. School lunch was extended to all elementary schools in Japan in 1952 and, with the enactment of the School Lunch Law, to junior high schools in 1954.

These early lunches initially included items such as bread or bread rolls, skimmed milk powder (later replaced in 1958 by milk bottles and cartons) and later flour donated by an American charity, a dessert, and a dish (such as daikon) that changed daily.[48] Other dishes included inexpensive protein such as stewed bean dishes, fried white fish, and, until the 1970s, whale meat. Provisions of rice were introduced in 1976, following a surplus of (government-distributed) Japanese rice, and became increasingly frequent during the 1980s. Hamburg steak, stew and Japanese curry became staples as well.

Today, as of 2004, 99% of elementary school students and 82% of junior high school students eat kyūshoku (school lunch) in Japan.[49] The food is grown locally, is almost never frozen, and, barring dietary restrictions, is the same for every student.[50] Children in most districts cannot bring their own meals to school until they reach high school, nor do schools have vending machines;[50] instead, children are taught to eat what they are served.

However, the daily bento boxes are designed by nutritionists to provide a balanced yet tasty meal for the children, working especially to appeal to picky or unhealthy eaters.[50] "Though Japan's central government sets basic nutritional guidelines, regulation is surprisingly minimal. Not every meal has to meet precise caloric guidelines......Central government officials say they have ultimate authority to step in if schools are serving unhealthy food, but they can’t think of any examples where that actually happened."[50]

In Japan, the tables are set and cleaned by the students.

"And because this is food-obsessed Japan, those standard meals are restaurant-worthy; in fact, Adachi Ward publishes a full-color cookbook based on its best school meals."[48] Dishes range from Asian foods such as naengmyeon, tom yam and ma po tofu to Western foods such as spaghetti, stew and clam chowder. However, "Japanese food, contrary to the common perception, isn't automatically healthy; it includes crispy chicken, rich bowls of salty ramen with pork belly and battered and deep-fried tempura. But, like most cuisines, it can be healthy."[48] For example, "You don't see low-fat options. You don't see dessert, other than fruit and yogurt. You occasionally see fried food, but in stark moderation."[48]

In both elementary school and middle school, students put on white coats and caps and serve their classmates,[48] who then all eat together in their classrooms instead of a cafeteria.[48]

To make lunches affordable for students, municipalities pay for the labor costs, but parents, who are billed monthly, pay for the ingredients.[48] These typically cost about 250 to 300 yen or $3 per meal per student, with reduced and free options for poorer families.[48]

Southeast Asia

Malaysia

In most Malaysian schools, students eat in a canteen where they purchase food and drinks from vendors. The choice of cuisine available in school canteens are usually Malay, Chinese, and Indian with varieties of rice, noodles, and breads. The common find in the average Malaysian school canteen are varieties of Nasi Lemak, Nasi Goreng, Chicken Rice, Popiah, and Laksa. The food and drinks in the canteens are sold at reduced prices to students. Underprivileged students can apply for the free-food program which, depending on the school, is either sponsored by the schools' parent-teacher associations or by the education ministry.[51]

Singapore

School meals in most primary and secondary schools, and junior colleges, are provided in each school's canteen (or tuckshop). The canteens are made up of stalls selling a variety of cuisine as well as beverages. Meals in the school canteens are of a cheaper but smaller compared to similar meals in public food centres in Singapore. To cater to the variety of races, religions and cultures in Singapore, school meals often offer a range of cuisines like Chinese, Indian, Malay and Western food. There is always at least one halal stall in each canteen.

To encourage healthier eating habits among children, the Health Promotion Board of Singapore launched the Healthy Eating in Schools Programme which gives an award to schools which serve healthy school meals. This includes cutting down on the sugar content in drinks and desserts, cutting down on deep-fried and fatty food, and including two servings of greens in the meals.[52]

Philippines

School meals in the Philippines appear to be relatively simplistic, with mainly rice, meat and gravy.[47]

South Asia

India

Main article: Midday Meal Scheme

Under the Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS), government schools and partially aided schools, along with Anganwadis, provide midday meals to the students attending such institutions, known as the Midday Meal Scheme. The meals served are free of cost and meet guidelines that have been set by the policy. The history of the program can be traced to 1925, making it one of the oldest free food programs for school children.

The Akshaya Patra Foundation, a public-private partnership in midday meal program, is a school meal program run by an NGO. Akshaya Patra started serving 1,500 children in the year 2000 and today it serves lunch to over 1.4 million school children in 10 states in India everyday.

A single afternoon lunch usually contains a cereal which is locally available, made in a way acceptable to the prevailing local customs. Vegetables cooked as curry or soups and a portion of milk is allotted for each child. The menu is occasionally varied to appeal to students.

Children in private schools usually carry their own lunch boxes. Many schools also have canteens, and street food vendors can often be found in front of the campuses.

In India, the National Programme of Nutritional Support to Primary Education (NP-NSPE) scheme, deployed nationwide by 1998, 104 million children were covered in 1.16 million Schools during 2013-14.[53]

West Asia

Iran

In the 1960s, Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi had intended a non-violent regeneration of Iranian society through economic and social reforms called White Revolution, with the ultimate long-term aim of transforming Iran into a global economic and industrial power. The White Revolution consisted of 19 elements that were introduced over a period of 15 years, with the first 6 introduced in 1963 and put to a national referendum on January 26, 1963. In 1975 the Shah started a program for 'Free and Compulsory Education and a daily free meal' for all children from kindergarten to 14 years of age. It provided free milk (1/3 pint) in schools to all children in Iran as well as pistachios, fresh fruit, and biscuits.

United Arab Emirates

Due to the economic boom, obesity has developed into a known health concern amongst adolescents. The previous three decades proving to be the worst. Results have shown obesity levels have surpassed those of America and Europe in school age children. Traditional food in the Persian Gulf region has alternated from the original high-fibre and low in fat to a westernized food content consisting of high in fat, sodium and cholesterol. The exercise levels have decreased rapidly, causing the surge of obesity in adolescents.[54]

North American Countries

Canada

Children eating their lunch in a Montreal school, 1943

Canada has no national school meal program,[55] and elementary schools are usually not equipped with kitchen facilities. Parents are generally expected to provide a packed lunch for their child to take to school, or have their child return home for the duration of the lunch period. However, some non-profit organizations dedicated to student nutrition programs do exist.[56]

Most Canadian middle schools, Grades 6-8, and high schools, grades 9-12, have Cafeterias that serve hot meals.

United States

Recipient of the U.S. School Lunch Program in 1936

The National School Lunch Program was created in 1946 when President Truman signed the National School Lunch Act into law. This legislation was originally created in order to aid farms struggling with their surplus provisions, in a way that was also beneficial to society.[57] Truman intended these meals to promote and protect child nutrition, while supporting consumption of American farm products.[58] Today, the National School Lunch Program is a federal nutrition assistance program operating in over 101,000 public and non-profit private schools and residential care institutions. Regulated and administered at the federal level by the Food and Nutrition Service of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), which defines the current program as nutritionally balanced, low-cost or free lunches to more than 31 million U.S. children each school day.

There is some controversy over the fact that the USDA is currently not only responsible for promoting health through nutritious school meals and diet guidelines, but also for promoting the consumption of major agricultural products such as dairy and pork.[59] Critics say this is an innate conflict of interest, evident in how deciding the National School Lunch Program standards remains a political process, influenced to a degree by food industry lobbyists. As a result, what currently constitutes "nutrition" in these meals does not include some of the basics needed for a healthy diet, as according to nutrition science.[60]

In its 66-year history, the program has expanded. It now includes the School Breakfast Program, the Snack Program, a Child and Adult Care Feeding Program and the Summer Food Service Program. At the State level, the National School Lunch Program is usually administered by State education agencies, who operate the program through agreements with school food authorities.

Generally, public or nonprofit private schools of high school grade or under and public or nonprofit private residential child care institutions may or may not participate in the school lunch program. School districts and independent schools that choose to take part in the program get cash minimal subsidies and donated commodities from the USDA for each meal they serve. In return, they must serve lunches that meet federal requirements, and they must offer free or reduced price lunches to eligible children. School food authorities can also be reimbursed for snacks served to children through age 18 in after-school education or enrichment programs.

School lunches must meet the applicable recommendations of the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, which state that no more than 30 percent of an individual's calories come from fat and less than 10 percent from saturated fat. Regulations also establish a standard for school lunches to provide one-third of the Recommended Dietary Allowances of protein, Vitamin A, Vitamin C, iron, calcium and calories. School lunches must meet federal nutrition requirements over the course of one week's worth of lunches served, but decisions about what specific foods to serve and how they are prepared are made by local school food authorities.

Vending machines in schools are also a major source of food for students. Under pressure from parents and anti-obesity advocates, many school districts moved to ban sodas, junk foods, and candy from vending machines and cafeterias.[61] Various laws have also been passed to limit foods sold in school vending machines. With increasing concern over traditional vending machines in schools, healthier vending options have gained popularity and are steadily being adopted by schools around the nation.[62][63] Such "healthy vending machines" are marketed as allowing students to perform better in addition to better health.

School meal programs in the United States provide school meals free of charge, or at a reduced (government subsidized) price, to the children of low income families. Those who do not qualify for free or reduced price are then charged a nominal fee.

Africa Countries

Nigeria

In April 2012, the State of Osun in Nigeria pioneered a statewide school meals programme for all elementary school pupils in public schools. The meals programme known as the O'MEALS programme (an acronym for the Osun Elementary School Feeding and Health Programme), provides lunch to 254,000 children in a total of 1,375 Elementary Schools across the State of Osun. In addition to staples such as rice, beans, yam served with stews, soups and vegetables, the programme incorporates daily fruits on the menu.

The programme is currently being implemented using a total number of 3,007 trained food vendors/cooks. All food items are sourced locally from farmers and others on the supply chain, enhancing the employment level within the State. Addressing children malnutrition has raised their academic performance and has increased the school enrollment making Osun the highest in pupil enrollment in Nigeria at 80%. This represents an increase of 24% compared to figures that existed prior to April 2012.[64]

In 2015, the manifesto of the All Progressives Congress (APC) articulated the adoption of a free meal plan on a national scale. Since the inception of President Muhammadu Buhari's administration, the implementation of this policy has come to the fore of his priorities. A national School Meals programme is subject of a budgetary proposal before the National Assembly. Also, the Kaduna State Government has implemented a school feeding programme.

Australia

Healthy Kids School Canteen Association

The Healthy Kids School Canteen Association is a not-for-profit, non-government, health promotion charity based in Sydney, Australia[65] It is a peak organisation for school canteens in New South Wales and the ACT.[66] In Australia, there has been a relapse as many school canteens have returned to offering junk food or pupils have started buying fast food outside the school. The association has developed policies intended to counter these trends including a takeover of provision of food in some schools.[67]

In response to the 2002 Childhood Obesity Summit, former Premier of New South Wales Bob Carr launched the "Fresh Tastes NSW Healthy School Canteen Strategy". Healthy Kids has become a key partner of the Ministry of Health in developing this plan. The strategy is to develop a taste for healthier foods by promoting and featuring healthier menu options while limiting the availability of less nutritious foods.[68] The program's menu guide was partially created by Rosemary Stanton.[69]

See also

General:

References

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