PDA

View Full Version : Sugar Free School


rice cracker
06-04-2004, 10:19 AM
I didn't know which forum to dump this article, Food or Current Events. Mods, move as necessary.


A Different Kind of Education
How One Woman Made a Difference

L I T H O N I A , Ga., June 4, 2004 — When Yvonne Butler began her teaching career, she was 186 pounds, and getting heavier.
"I would just keep eating," Butler said. "Candies, cookies anything that was sweet."

Then one day a few years ago, she was rushed to the hospital. Her doctor said she was about to have a stroke.

"He said, 'If this stroke doesn't kill you it's going to leave you a vegetable," Butler recalled. "And that point everything just sort of stopped. I was terrified."

Butler changed her diet. She gave up all those pies, and cakes, and fried foods. Within six months she had lost more than 50 pounds.

Reflections of You

Butler, who had recently become the principal of Browns Mill Elementary School in Lithonia, Ga., then began seeing some of the weight problems her 700 students were having.

"I noticed children were larger than they were supposed to be," she said. "And that scared me because it sort of reminded me of me."

She ordered sweeping changes. The first priority was to remove the soda machines — but there was a problem: the school district had a contract with Coca-Cola.

So Butler insisted the vending machines sell only Dasani-brand water, which is a Coca-Cola product.

Butler then banned fried foods, high-fat foods, and especially sugary desserts. Browns Mill was now a "sugar-free school," which left many parents angry.

"I was very skeptical. I didn't think it was going to work. Of course it had never been done before. And I thought perhaps she had overstepped her boundaries," said parent Sheila Anderson.

A Lesson for Life

Butler organized nutrition "seminars" for parents. She even enlisted the bus drivers to ensure students did not eat sugary snacks on their way to or from school.

"It's hard, because you get attached to those things and it's hard to give them up," said one girl.

Within a year though, not only had many students lost weight, but:

- visits to the school nurse were down 30 percent
- disciplinary problems dropped 20 percent.
- And test scores improved 10 percent to 15 percent.

And that's not all that has changed.

"They are taking responsibility for their health and their lifestyle," Butler said. "This is something that they learn at this school but they will take with them for the rest of their lives."

And thanks to this program, those lives may be longer and healthier.


http://abcnews.go.com/sections/WNT/Living/obesity_principal_040603-1.html

nonamerasian
06-04-2004, 10:48 AM
Within a year though, not only had many students lost weight, but:

- visits to the school nurse were down 30 percent
- disciplinary problems dropped 20 percent.
- And test scores improved 10 percent to 15 percent.



Interesting, although there is a difference between correlation and causation.

Which is the case here?

Arex
06-04-2004, 11:32 AM
I don't think my school experience would have been the same without my typical lunches consisting of funyuns, grandma's peanut butter cookies, multiple neopolitan ice-cream sandwiches and fruit punch.

RX

rice cracker
06-04-2004, 11:36 AM
Interesting, although there is a difference between correlation and causation.

Which is the case here?

Well, my oh-so-professional analysis ( :wink: ) would be that: sugar = hyper. Get rid of the sugar, get rid of the hyper.

Arex
06-04-2004, 11:54 AM
Well, my oh-so-professional analysis ( :wink: ) would be that: sugar = hyper. Get rid of the sugar, get rid of the hyper.
Get rid of the hyper = get rid of the essence and spirit of being a bratty little, carefree child.=(

RX

thaite
06-04-2004, 11:56 AM
I saw this report on tv. The principal enlisted the bus drivers to confiscate kids' lunches if they had snacks she considered bad. Man, I'd be pissed if my lunch got taken away.

rice cracker
06-04-2004, 11:57 AM
Get rid of the hyper = get rid of the essence and spirit of being a bratty little, carefree child.=(

RX

I suppose my post there looked a bit iron-fisted. But children were hyper (though not to the extent they are today) before companies like Coke started contracting with schools and putting their high-sugar products into cafeterias? I guess, not removing the essense and spirit children, as in their natural exuberence and curiosity, ect, but the buzzing sugar junkie brain disruption they're experiencing today?

Chester
06-04-2004, 12:00 PM
I'm not for dietary fascism, but things have gotten pretty out of hand with regards to sugar and additives, so it's nice to see a school principal make sure that, at the least, that school will be something of a sanctuary from crap passed off as food.

Arex
06-04-2004, 01:25 PM
I suppose my post there looked a bit iron-fisted. But children were hyper (though not to the extent they are today) before companies like Coke started contracting with schools and putting their high-sugar products into cafeterias? I guess, not removing the essense and spirit children, as in their natural exuberence and curiosity, ect, but the buzzing sugar junkie brain disruption they're experiencing today?
No no, I wasn't commenting on your analysis of the situation, but rather on the unfortunate situation as a whole. You're probably right that there is probably an overabundance of sugar and other nutritionally questionable compounds coursing through the veins of our youth, and it probably is having an adverse affect on their attention spans and ability to concentrate and learn. I was just reminiscing about my own sugar-propelled youth...=)

I do think it's one thing for the school to stop offering tasty, sugary treats, and quite another for the school to be confiscating sugar-filled snacks brought from home. That's overstepping the line.

RX

applehead
06-13-2004, 07:45 AM
so basically she did what the parents should have
been doing at home!!!

a lot of bad eating habits are acquired
when you're young.
it's so important to teach kids to eat right
and help them develop a taste for fruit and vegetables
at a young age.