Education.com

How much responsibility do schools bear for addressing the obesity of their students? (page 6)

By Scott LaFee
American Association of School Administrators

Societal Impact

In the end, it seems, the question of how much responsibility public school leaders shoulder for the health and well-being of students ultimately depends upon the individual administrator.

If he or she decides to act, there can be no half-measures, says Mary Ann Lopez, food service director for the 5,500-student South Windsor, Conn., district.

“Schools that try to do both, offering good foods and bad, aren’t going to succeed,” Lopez says. “Kids will always buy the bad. It’s all or nothing. You just have to know going in that you’re going to take a hit at first. Kids need time to adjust to new menus that don’t have the usual unhealthy foods. But they all learn.”

Taras at UCSD goes further, saying good school leaders do as much as they can, not just because it’s educationally or economically the right thing to do, but because lives hang in the balance.

A recent study, published in The New England Journal of Medicine, said childhood obesity threatens to create the first American generation of kids whose average life span will be shorter than that of their parents.

“As a society,” Taras says, “we have to ask ourselves what it is we want for our youth. Do we want kids who are literate and math-ready, but who are significantly more likely than necessary to drop dead at a young age from medical ramifications of a poor lifestyle?

“If this is not what we want in our society, then the mandated core curriculum as it is currently written (for literacy, math and science) is deficient. It should also include outcomes that will help us produce productive citizens who will live long enough to demonstrate their full productivity.”



Scott LaFee is a science and health reporter with the Union-Tribune in San Diego. E-mail: scott.lafee@uniontrib.com

View Full Article

Add your own comment

Ask a Question

Have questions about this article or topic? Ask
Ask
150 Characters allowed

Washington Virtual Academies

Tuition-free online school for Washington students.