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Posts Tagged ‘school parties’

Healthy School Birthday Ideas

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Healthy Birthday Snack Ideas:

A child’s school birthday celebration should be centered around the child; instead, it has become centered around cupcakes.  Parents bring in these unhealthy treats and kids rejoice.  Yet with the current child obesity crisis, many are rethinking this caloric tradition.  In response, I have created this list of healthy birthday school celebrations.  Enjoy them!  And please, let me know if you have any additional suggestions.

Non-Food Options:

1)    Allow extra recess time in honor of each student’s birthday and allow the birthday child to choose an active activity or game.  The birthday student’s parents are welcome to participate.

2)    Craft project: Bring in supplies so each student can make a birthday card for the birthday child.

3)    Craft project: Decorate a balloon with stickers and glitter.  Each child gets to take their creation home.

4)    Bring in a large balloon bouquet and let each child pick a balloon to take home.

5)    Parent reads selected book of choice to class.

6)    Create a birthday book for child; each classmate creates a special page about the birthday child.

7)    Provide goodie bags with stickers, pencils, pens, school supplies, crayons, noise makers etc.

8)    Arrange a classroom scavenger hunt with small non-food gifts for each child.

9)    Decorate a birthday crown.

10) Bring in coloring books for each student.  Have each child color a page from their book and then hang up the masterpieces and have a ‘gallery showing’.

11) Bring in small fun activity gifts for the students, i.e. jump ropes, mini-Frisbees, waffle balls.  Allow some time for the students to play with their new gift.

12) Give each child elastic bracelets with birthday child’s name stamped on it.

Healthy (Or At Least Healthier) Food Options:

1)    ‘Make your own’ yogurt parfait with fat-free yogurt, low-fat granola, and fresh berries.

2)    Fruit Kebobs: Cut fruit into interesting shapes and let children put the fruit onto skewers with a few marshmallows.

3)    Frozen Banana Krispie Treats: Cut a banana in half.  Put a Popsicle stick in the banana and then smear with low-fat vanilla yogurt.  Roll in rice krispies, freeze.

4)    Fresh fruit topped with low-fat whipped cream.

5)    Waffle topped with fruit and chocolate syrup.

6)    Low-fat pudding with low-fat whipped cream.

7)    Frozen fruit bars.

8)    Create a trail mix: Let each child choose their own mixture of whole grain pretzels, multi-grain chex, and dried fruit.

9)    Yogurt covered raisins.

10) Apples slices dipped in caramel dipping sauce.

11) Baked apples with cinnamon.

12) Sorbet.

13) Orange frizzes: Mix chilled orange juice with carbonated water and a scoop of sorbet.

14) One scoop of low-fat ice cream with sprinkles.

15) Exotic fruit of choice.

16) Jell-o topped with low-fat whipped cream.

17) Baked tortilla chips with salsa.

18) Homemade low-fat rice krispie treats.

19) Yogurt covered pretzels.

20) Baked potato chips.

21) Low-fat pita with hummus.

22) Baked tortilla with guacamole.

23) One scoop of fat free ice cream in a wafer cone.

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The Cupcake Wars: As Seen in the NY Times (Plus More!)

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Last week, there was an article in the NY Times about Meme Roth and her fight with her children’s school concerning school birthday parties and cupcakes.

What sets her off is the junk food served on special occasions: the cupcakes that come out for every birthday, the doughnuts her children were once given in gym, the sugary “Fun-Dip” packets that some parent provided the whole class on Valentine’s Day.

“I thought I was sending my kid to P.S. 9, not Chuck E. Cheese,” Ms. Roth, a trim, impassioned 40-year-old from Atlanta, said in an interview. “Is there or is there not an obesity and diabetes epidemic in this country?”

Although I agree with Ms. Roth’s concern, the article outlines the outlandish strategies and infantile behaviour she uses to get her point across.  For the complete article, click here.

Those who know me understand that this is my pet issue.  I have seen too many children crying because they are trying to eat healthy but are surrounded by so many temptations.  In my opinion, schools should be a safe haven.  So I drafted a letter to the NY Times and surprising, it was printed in Saturday’s paper!  Here is my article below:

TAKING SIDES

IN THE

CUPCAKE WARS

Published: June 19, 2009

Esther Pearl Watson

Re “Mother’s Fight Against Junk Food Puts a School on Edge,” by Susan Dominus (Big City column, June 16):

As a pediatrician and a child weight loss specialist, I am conflicted about this article. MeMe Roth, the mother “driven mad” by junk food, may not use the best tactics, but her point is right. We are in the midst of a child obesity epidemic. One out of every three children in our country is either overweight or obese. Our schools should be a safe haven for our children.

I have overweight children crying in my office on a daily basis because they are trying to eat well but are confronted with temptations at school. I do believe in all foods in moderation. But our children have plenty of exposure to unhealthy foods outside of school.

In a typical classroom of 26 children, there are up to 26 days of birthday cupcakes to contend with. Then you add in celebrations for holidays, and many classes have a party every week. There are many healthy birthday options, and we can use them to celebrate our children’s birthdays without sacrificing their health.

Joanna Dolgoff
New York, June 16, 2009

I am interested in hearing your thoughts about cupcakes and school birthday parties.  I know I am in the minority.  I agree that it is perfectly fine for a child to have a cupcake every now and then.  The problem is that it becomes more than now and then.  Each child’s birthday usually results in two cupcakes- one at the school party and one at the out-0f-school party.  Not to mention all the junk food that is thrown at our kids from everywhere else.  Is it really necessary to add another temptation?  Can’t we celebrate a birthday without eating unhealthy fare?

Next week: my suggestions for healthy birthday celebrations.

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