February 9, 2012

Model Teachers Buy From Healthy Vending Machines In School

Do children in America have good role models for healthy eating habits?  Parents are the most important role models for children’s development, but in some situations, parents are too busy to dine often with their children, and may fail to promote healthy eating habits when they do.

Teachers, on the other hand, are powerful role models with the ability to reach whole classes of children at once, and the chance to do so every day.  If there were healthy vending machines in school, teachers would have both the motivation and the opportunity to model healthy diet practices for students.

In Japan, elementary and middle school teachers (and guest teachers) are required to eat with their students during lunchtime.  Each person receives a portion of food, and every student is expected to finish everything on his or her plate.  The teacher serves as a role model for this behavior, and deviation is generally not permitted.  When I was an assistant English teacher in Japan, I was not allowed to eat with the students because I had a hard time swallowing the fried fish heads that were a regular part of the meals!

By middle school, Japanese students stop playing with their food and simply finish everything on their tray before clean up time (an innovative practice where all of the students clean the school—Japanese schools have no need for janitors!).  Healthier diets and appropriate role models may both contribute to Japan’s significantly lower obesity rate than the U.S.’s.

In the United States, teachers rarely dine with their students in the classroom.  Lunch is a free time for students when they are separated from teachers and other potential mealtime role models.   Instead of buying meals from the school cafeteria, teachers usually opt to bring food from home.

But if there were healthy food options available at school, teachers and faculty would undoubtedly change that routine.  If vending machines in school offered a variety of healthy snacks, eating lunch on campus would become easier and healthier for teachers and students alike.  And providing nutritious foods for teachers to purchase and eat in front of the students would have the added bonus of finally providing those students with excellent mealtime role models in school!

Would Kids Eat Healthy Snacks From Vending Machines in School?

If the vending machines in school offered organic trail mix, vitamin water, and protein bars instead of junk food, kids would eat the healthier snacks!

It is a truth universally acknowledged that the food kids get in school today is neither healthy nor delicious.  School cafeterias and traditional vending machines offer cheap, processed foods with high fat and sugar content, and little nutritional value.  But a recent study shows that when healthy meals are served in school cafeterias instead of the more common unhealthy meal options, kids do not shy away from the healthy lunches.

The study looked at data on school lunches in over 300 Minnesota public school districts.  They determined that the schools that served the healthiest meals experienced the same amount of demand for cafeteria lunches as the schools that offered only unhealthy meals.  It is conventional wisdom that kids prefer junk food to more wholesome options, but this study suggests that for kids, availability is more important than preference.

Schools could help instill healthy eating habits in their students simply by providing healthier snacks for students.  The above-cited study states that in order to serve healthy lunches, school cafeterias would have to upgrade their kitchens and retrain staff – a potentially expensive process.

But there is another, easier way to make nutritious foods available to kids.  Schools can encourage their students to eat more healthily by replacing all of the older, junk food-filled vending machines in school with newer, more attractive vending machines that are packed with healthy choices, such as granola bars and organic juices.

Since hungry children will eat whatever is most readily available to them, we can help them eat right by filling schools with affordable healthy snacks.  Healthy vending machines can help!