One of the best ways to make other people happy is to be happy yourself.
-Author, Gretchen Rubin
A suburban Atlanta school principal claims to have a simple solution to improve test scores, reduce discipline problems, and improve student health: ban sugar.
FoxNews.com (January 29, 2009) reports that for the past ten years, Yvonne Sanders-Butler, the principal of Browns Mill Elementary in Lithonia, Georgia, has required students to participate in daily physical exercise and eat healthy foods. Her school enforces a strict ban on sugar. According to Butler, standardized test scores increased 15 percent at the school within the first year of the program. She said discipline problems decreased by 23 percent. Student health has improved and obesity at the school has been virtually eliminated.
"For me, it was not just about educating children about reading, writing, and arithmetic," Butler said. "If these people were going to be successful, I had to ensure that they were going to be healthy."
Initially, Butler's sugar-free program faced resistance from skeptics who feared it would bust tight school budgets. The principal said she paid nutrition experts, who revamped the school cafeteria menu, out of her own pocket. And ordering the new food items in bulk ended up saving money.
"In nine years, we have saved $425,000," Butler said. "We've done that not by cutting back but actually by having more fruits and vegetables."
Seventeen other Atlanta-area schools have implemented the program, and Butler said she has received hundreds of calls from educators and health officials around the world wanting to learn more about her "sugar-free zone."
Natural Playscapes: Creating Outdoor Play Environments for the Soul by Rusty Keeler, is an inspiring, yet practical resource on bringing outdoor playspaces to life. It describes how children relate to the natural world, gives many examples from around the world of how early childhood professionals and parents have planned and constructed natural playscapes. Included are blueprints, step by step instructions, and tip sheets such as "20 Ways to Create Natural Playscapes," and "15 Free or Low-Cost Things to Enrich Your Playscapes."
Comments (5)
Displaying All 5 Commentssanta margarita center
san rafael, cal, United States
hi i value what this
United States
It is a nice idea to protect your kids form sugar by not having it available and to implement physical activity every day...
But we already knew that. Schools already conform to nutrition standards and we (used to at least) already had PE and recess for physical activity. Forcing “good decisions” on kids will not help them learn to be intrinsically motivated to make good decisions about health and appreciate physical activity for its own sake and the way it makes you feel.
It sounds like it is working for that school, but I would caution anyone wanting to imitate what they have done it to think it through carefully.
Bastrop, TX, United States
I'm thinking that the raised scores are not so much from the decreased ingesting of sugar, but from the increased physical activity! That's what the current research is showing us. Check out Dr. Ratey's book, "Spark."
Sacramento City College
Sacramento, CA, United States
I use the daily quote to reflect upon how these features touch our lives as educators. The adult college students that I work and grow with very much appreciate these as they refine their dedication to work with children. This quote and passage is especially important as we prepare a next generation of active adults! Help serve children today so that they can serve themselves tomorrow! Make meals a healthy part of their school day. Thanks!
Wedgwood Coop Preschool
Seattle, WA, United States
My comments are about the ad for the Circuit
Play Beginnings.. the one that states that kids
won't leave the floor THEREBY REDUCING THE
RISK OF FALLING FROM EXCESSIVE HEIGHTS.
Children in the early years need to learn to take
risks - they need to build upper body strenth -
and they need to get outdoors.
Take back the playground, people.
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