Saturday, January 1, 2011

School Meals That Rock Announces FED UP with MRS. Q

When Mrs. Q – the school teacher/celebrity blogger – posted her final 2010 meal on Fed Up with School Lunch, she got a bit of media buzz. In one sentence, she also got the facts about school nutrition altogether wrong: The meals I ate were identical to meals eaten by kids all over this country every day in a school in your neighborhood. Not even close, Mrs. Q!


“In a December 17th post, Mrs. Q described a little voice telling her to document the hazards of school lunch in her Chicago-area school,” explains Dayle Hayes, MS, RD (registered dietitian) and President, Nutrition for the Future in Billings, Montana. “A strong voice has urged me to expose the claims of Mrs. Q – and Mr. Oliver, Ms. Cooper, Dr. Phil, the Two Angry Moms, and every other extreme critic of school lunch. It is a well-informed voice with 20+ years experience in helping to improve meals in my neighborhood school and in districts across the country.”


During 2011, School Meals That Rock will continue to document the appealing nutrient-rich, delicious school lunches (as well as breakfasts and snacks) that are really eaten by kids all over this country every day in districts large and small. These meals are amazing because school nutrition programs are able to serve them on USDA reimbursement rates of $1.76 or less for breakfast and $2.74 or less for lunch, depending upon local income levels. These rates must cover food – increasingly fresh and local – as well as labor and benefits.


Ms. Hayes, Chair of the School Nutrition Services Dietetic Practice Group (SNS DPG), believes that it is time to completely bust the myths about school meals and to give credit where it is due. “Mrs. Q got a lot of online interest for blogging about poor lunches in a single school. School Meals That Rock will gather more support for the positive promotion of real meals in many districts.”


For the 2011 Fed Up with Mrs. Q project, Hayes invites everyone to submit a photo of their Tray of the Day for Success at School and to Like School Meals That Rock on Facebook. The goals of the project are simple:

  • To celebrate the real nutrition revolution in America’s school meals
  • To showcase over 200 appealing school meals from 50 states during 2011
  • To create a community of over 5,000 school meal supporters on Facebook


“Mrs. Q claimed her blog ‘was a campaign to raise awareness’, but it was based on incomplete and erroneous information,” says Hayes. “Fed Up with Mrs. Q is a fact-based project to celebrate the transformation of school nutrition speared-headed by members of the SNS DPG and the School Nutrition Association.”


To share a Tray of the Day for Success at School, send a photo, with date served and a brief description of the meal to schoolmealsthatrock@gmail.com. To join the online supporters of ongoing excellence school nutrition programs, go to School Meals That Rock and hit the Like button.


3 comments:

  1. While I understand the frustration, I also feel that attacking Mrs Q personally is uncalled for. She never says that the lunch program in her school is intentionally bad. She constantly praises the people who work in the program. She feels like the guidelines that her district operates under do not do enough to provide good food to the children that she teaches, and her blog was an attempt to draw attention to that. Have you tried reaching out to her?

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  2. Thanks so much for your comment. I did reach out to Mrs. Q and had a guest post on her blog last June (http://fedupwithschoollunch.blogspot.com/2010/06/guest-blog-school-meals-that-rock.html).

    I very much appreciate that Mrs Q said nice things about the folks working in the program. However I have two main objections to her approach.
    (1) The global, total condemnation of school lunch ALL over the country eaten EVERY day by children in YOUR neighborhood. There have been AMAZING changes in school meals over the past few years and those should be acknowledged as well as any ongoing problems.

    (2) There are MANY collaborative strategies that Mrs. Q could have used to promote positive changes in her school nutrition program. Among them ... meet with the program director, join the school wellness committee, or form a student/parent/teacher group to use existing resources to make improvements.

    I plan to write about all the positive things anyone can do when their schools meals DO NOT ROCK on Facebook (www.facebook.com/pages/School-Meals-That-Rock/115393195143514).

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  3. Hi Dayle,

    I sent you an email and I hope to hear back from you soon!
    Mrs. Q

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