“I wouldn’t say that processed food, ready meals and even
takeaways aren’t relevant to modern life, it’s just that over the past 40 years
there are three generations of people who have come out of school and gone
through their home life without ever being shown how to cook properly.” - Jamie
Oliver
The days of the infamous Turkey Twizzler are a thing of the
past thanks to Jamie Oliver’s campaign on school dinners back in 2005.
But how much has changed in the past eight years?
Well just last week plans were put forward to ban packed
lunches and pupils barred from leaving school during breaks to buy junk food
under a government plan to increase the take-up of school meals.
The proposal drawn up by John Vincent and Henry Dimbleby,
the founders of food company Leon, aims to tackle the poor public image of
school meals.
It’s estimated that parents spend almost £1bn on packed
lunches but only 1% of them meet nutritional standards.
Plans put in place would also see cooking become part of the
curriculum until children are 14 and schools could also offer lessons to
parents and their children after school.
So how many children eat school meals at the moment? Well
57% take a packed lunch or buy food outside school.
And almost a fifth of UK children are obese by the time they
leave primary school.
Yes the new plans may take the pressure off concerned parents at home who want their children to eat healthily but are also on a tight budget.
But should we deny children the chance to be an individual
and get involved in making their own packed lunch?
That surely is another way
of encouraging them to learn about food and its nutritional value.
Did you prefer school dinners or a packed lunch at school?
Do you the new plans would help to improve children’s health at school?
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