Survey: 61% of U.S. Teachers Buy Food for Hungry Students Posted on February 23, 2011
A new survey of 638 US public school teachers has shed light on how our education system is dealing with the national epidemic of childhood hunger. With 1 out of every 6 Americans living in poverty (nearly half of all black children are poor) and with 1 out of every 7 of us relying upon government food assistance, its no secret that weve got a major problem with childhood hunger. But numbers and statistics can only tell us so much. Our nations teachers often find themselves on the front lines of the battle against childhood hunger and what they tell us, combined with numbers and statistics, paints a pretty alarming picture.
According to the survey and USA Today, two-thirds of the teachers (grades K-8) surveyed said they had students who regularly came to school hungry. Nearly the same number (63%) said that they problem has gotten worse over the past year. The problem is truly nationwide. Its really telling to see how severe the problem is, Bill Shore, founder and director of Share Our Strength, a non-profit organization fighting childhood hunger, told USA Today. Its not isolated to certain urban and rural areas
its really happening across the board.
Nearly two-thirds (65%) of the teachers surveyed said that many children depend on meals served by schools as their main source of nutrition. A shocking 61% said they themselves bought food to serve to hungry students. Former Florida elementary school teacher Stacey Frakes says kids in her classes would sit with their heads down on their desks, nearly in tears from the hunger that tormented their little bellies. She kept simple snacks to feed them because learning was close to impossible when they are thinking about their next good meal, she said.
According to USA Today, 11.6 million children across the country are fed school breakfast every day, with 74% of the meals served at no cost to the student. There is a record demand for these school meals, and in some locales nearly all students from low-income homes are enrolled in breakfast programs. Still, many kids dont take advantage of breakfast programs because they arrive at school to late or because of the stigma attached to welfare by a society that scorns the poor and counts personal financial success as a more noble value than helping people in need. Until that changes, the richest country in the world will continue to have to deal with increasing numbers of children who dont have enough to eat.
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