Author Topic: Big Brother in Iowa? School District Monitors Kids' Lunch Choices  (Read 594 times)

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Big Brother in Iowa? School District Monitors Kids' Lunch Choices
« on: September 08, 2010, 01:51:06 PM »
I didn't really have a problem with the fat report cards, but this is too much. 


Big Brother in Iowa? School District Monitors Kids' Lunch Choices
By Jana Winter
Published September 08, 2010
FoxNews.com

An Iowa school district's lunch program asks children as young as 5 years old to memorize a four-digit PIN code so it can monitor what they eat in the school cafeteria -- prompting some parents to claim it's an unhealthy case of "Big Brother."

The Ankeny Community School District is maintaining a database that records what the kids buy to eat and then checks their food choices against national nutrition guidelines.

The program is intended to provide the children with more food options while ensuring compliance with new and stricter state-mandated nutrition requirements. But some parents are worried that the program infringes on people’s freedoms. And others want to know why their 5-year-olds need to memorize a PIN before they can tie their shoelaces, and what they’re supposed to do if they forget their four-digit number.

Garry Howe says he was shocked when his two sons brought home a letter from school last week informing him of the  program. The letter included two sets of PIN numbers — one for Benny, 5, who is in kindergarten, the other for Nate, 7, who is in second grade.

It read in part:

Benny and Nate Howe, ages 5 and 7, of Ankeny, Iowa, are required to memorize PIN numbers as part of their school district's new lunch program.

“The PIN numbers will make serving lines more efficient and allow more time for students to focus on their lunch selections through our offer vs. serve program and daily salad bar. This will in turn accommodate increased meal choices and the relocation of our point-of-sale machine.

“Classroom teachers have been working with students to memorize their PIN numbers. As students “check-out” they will tell the checkout scanner their number. The scanner will record the items purchased and verify that a lunch is purchased that meets the new National School Lunch Program (NSLP) guidelines. The point of sale employee will also visually verify the student’s identity to ensure the appropriate number was given by the student.”

The letter went on to thank parents for helping their kids memorize the PINs and asked them to stress the importance of keeping the numbers confidential.

“My children have to memorize a four-digit PIN if they want to eat lunch at school,” said Howe, two of whose four children are in grades K-5. “It sounds like Big Brother to me....

 “The PIN pulls up the child's picture for validation and records what the child is eating so Big Brother can keep track of my child's food consumption,” he said.

But the school district says the PIN system provides for quicker, more efficient and streamlined food service while ensuring what students select from the cafeteria complies with the law.

"We’re making sure that as they’re leaving the lunch line that the menu items they’ve selected match up with state law, so they’re selecting a meal that has all the basic [components] of good nutrition,” said school district spokesman Jarrett Peterson. “We’re not tracking what each individual child eats.”

The PIN program being rolled out this week is a response to Iowa’s 2008 Healthy Kids Act, which targets childhood obesity through an overhaul of school food, wellness and fitness programs throughout the state.

One provision of the law, which went into effect in July, says that any and all food offered on school grounds — in vending machines, a la carte cafeteria options, even fundraising bake sales — must adhere to federal guidelines.

Peterson said the school district is not storing the information in any kind of database.

“We are not tracking each individual student’s meals, we are tracking to make sure the meals we serve are in compliance with the Healthy Kids Act,” he said.

It’s not unusual to use technology to ensure compliance with federal nutrition standards, said Rochelle Davis, founding executive director of Healthy Schools Campaign, a Chicago-based national non-profit organization that advocates for healthier schools.

“A lot of school districts have moved to students having a card or a code,” she said. “I’ve mostly heard about it in connection with tracking money and trying to deal with student confidentiality, so the fact that they’re monitoring one extra thing might just be in the end a good third use.”

But Marc Rotenberg, executive director of Electronic Privacy Information Center, a privacy and civil liberties advocacy center, said there is a growing trend of schools collecting student data and that schools need to be open with parents about what they’re doing with that student information.

He said he could not recall hearing about a program like this.   

“It’s interesting, it’s obviously more than just debiting of student account, it’s about tracking what kids are eating in kindergarten,” Rotenberg said.

“What exactly is the point? Seems like there’s a much less intrusive way to meet this goal. It’s also kind of weird to teach kindergartners how to remember PIN numbers so they can get lunch.”

Davis didn’t think this would be much of an issue.

“I’m amazed how young kids don’t have problems with technology and remembering their passwords, their parents' passwords, cell phone numbers,” she said. “It’s a four digit pin number — I don’t know if it’s a huge issue.”

But Howe says it’s ridiculous that Benny, his 5-year-old, has to memorize a PIN, though he isn't too concerned about his older son.

“I just asked Nate if he knew his number, and he rattled it off with no problem,” Howe said.

“Benny had no idea.”

http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/09/08/big-brother-watching-kids-eat-at-school/

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Re: Big Brother in Iowa? School District Monitors Kids' Lunch Choices
« Reply #1 on: September 08, 2010, 02:05:23 PM »
All based on the stupidity of the assinine BMI index.

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Re: Big Brother in Iowa? School District Monitors Kids' Lunch Choices
« Reply #2 on: September 09, 2010, 06:38:31 AM »
I dont think its about monitoring food choices near as much as its a debit card for an account for the idiot kids that always lose there money or get it taken from them. Schools should offer balanced, healthy choices, an 8 years old shouldnt be able to buy 4 bags of doritos for lunch unless the parent is there to approve. There need to be some check and balances.

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Re: Big Brother in Iowa? School District Monitors Kids' Lunch Choices
« Reply #3 on: September 09, 2010, 06:46:13 AM »
Back in my day, you marched thru the line and some old hag with a net on her head gave you pizza, corn and applesauce and you either liked it and eat it or went without for the day......

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Re: Big Brother in Iowa? School District Monitors Kids' Lunch Choices
« Reply #4 on: November 08, 2014, 07:15:12 AM »
Many parents prefer to send their children off to school with a packed lunch, believing that the food they have given them is far healthier than school lunches. But a new study, published in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, claims this may not be the case.

The research team, led by Alisha R. Farris of the Department of Human Nutrition, Food and Exercise at Virginia Tech, found that school lunches had better average nutritional quality than packed lunches.

"We found that both packed and school lunches almost entirely met nutrition standards, except school lunches were below energy and iron recommendations, whereas packed lunches exceeded fat and saturated fat recommendations," says Farris.

The quality of school lunches has been a major focus in recent years. In 2012, the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) updated the National School Lunch Program (NSLP) guidelines, setting out a number of recommendations with the aim of offering healthier food choices to children at school.

As part of the guidelines, the USDA recommend that schools should ensure students are offered fruits and vegetables every day, are offered fat-free or low-fat milk varieties, given a choice of whole-grain rich foods and are served the correct food portion size, based on their age.

It seems these recommendations have proved successful so far. In March, Medical News Today reported on a study from Harvard School of Public Health in Boston, MA, claiming that the guidelines have increased consumption of fruits and vegetables among low-income students.