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Encouraging a child to eat their sandwiches.....your thoughts..

34 replies

sagandswing · 03/12/2012 14:34

Hello, I was just wondering what your thought are on this;

Dd's school try to encourage all children to eat their sandwhiches (which is fair enough) there have been several occassions that my Dd hasn't eaten her snacky stuff and only nibbled on her sandwiches (I kind of imagined she was too busy wanting to play as she tends to eat most of the foods I put in her lunch bag at home), she has also been in a vile mood when leaving school saying that she doesn't want to go again, doesn't like her teacher etc...which to be honest I just put down to her being tired.

Now on friday I was informed by her teacher that Dd wouldn't eat her sandwiches because she didn't like them, teacher had suggested that mum wouldn't of put anything she didn't like in her lunch box (which I wouldn't). So we went home and I found that she hadn't eaten ANYTHING at all (on closer inspection I realised that the chicken sandwhich had a stray piece of sweetcorn in which Dd really doesn't like...oh dear!) so I am guessing that if Dd doesn't eat all or most of her sandwiches she doesn't get to eat anything else??.

I can understand that the school have a duty of care to be sure that the Dc eat their sandwiches but surley it would be best that a child eats SOMETHING during the day?? be that a pack of crisps or a breakfast bar??.

Please do not shoot me down if you are a teacher. She is very petit and her appetite isn't that great to begin with. She can also become a bit difficult when she is hungry, I have had a chat with her about eating her sandwiches first but TBH I'm not sure that will be of any help unless I am there to monitor her.

SO what are your thoughts? Do you think it would be acceptable for me to check her lunch bag when the teacher stops me for a quick chat about her behaviour and if she hasn't eaten anything point this out? or would it seem unacceptable for me to just pass Dd the snacks from her lunch bag?

OP posts:
olddogs · 03/12/2012 14:36

my dd doesnt eat sandwiches at all. she wont eat bread.... i just put a pack of ham in there. soemtimes its not even naice ham

Greensleeves · 03/12/2012 14:40

It's unlikely to be the teacher actually standing over the children while they eat, although the teacher may say something before/after lunch and let parents know if there is a problem with child not eating. In all the school's I've been in the teachers have a lunch break and MTAs supervise children eating.

I think it's more than possible they are telling her she can't eat her XYZ until she has eaten her sandwiches/some of them. I don't approve of it either, I think it is better a child eats something rather than nothing. I'd have a word with the teacher and see if someone can have a word with the MTAs maybe.

Have you tried putting stuff other than sandwiches in? My two will sometimes have homemade pasties, cheese turnovers, falafels, that sort of thing. Just rings the changes a bit. DS2 did once get barked at by an MTA for not having a "sandwich, roll or equivalent", but I told him to just smile and say "I'll let Mummy know what you've said".

Tgger · 03/12/2012 14:44

How old is she? Do you get her to eat sandwiches/main course first at home rather than other stuff?

Not sure my view on this as you ask! If she likes sandwiches, eats them at home regularly and you know they have that rule I would strongly enforce it or not put the sandwiches in there.

learnandsay · 03/12/2012 14:45

My daughter is bad at eating her lunch. I nearly always pack her one folded slice of bread divide in two, half just butter the other half butter and honey, (which she requests but almost never touches.) Fillings, cheese, salami, ham aren't welcomed by her apparently. Sliced vegetables get eaten. Fruit gets eaten. Green Pepperami gets eaten. She loves those Fridge Raider nibbles. (But since they're 100% saturated fat and artificial crap, she hardly ever gets them, and then only two per day max.) She loves Hungarian salami, (won't eat any other kind of real salami.) So in the end she gets a kind of picnic and she eats the bits that she wants. Sometimes I explain what she's got in her lunch and tell her I want it all eaten. When that happens she usually takes a bite out of the butter sandwich! She eats her yoghurt too.

Moredofbumsnet · 03/12/2012 14:45

I don't have this problem as my dc are serious sandwich scoffers, but if I did i would just put a random selection of bits of cheese, chicken ,fruit, cracker,breadstick,salad etc etc in a box and hope that some of it got eaten.

BloooCowWonders · 03/12/2012 14:49

Presumably your dd has the free fruit st break time. So she won't have had nothing at all.

Why can't SHE delve into her lunch box at going-home time?

littleducks · 03/12/2012 14:51

I would put picnicy snack things in to break the habit.

Mine have soup in a flask or pasta/jacket potatoes as they find sandwichs get a bit dull

dinkystinky · 03/12/2012 14:56

DS1 is rubbish at eating his packed lunch - I've had to instigate a rule that he must eat at least half otherwise he cant take toys to school for playtime. We've found making the meals small - and varying them - helps - often its a juice, wrap/panini or small tub of pasta, frube and a piece of fruit.

steppemum · 03/12/2012 15:05

I would try to change the lunch box - would she eat crackers and pieces of cheese? In fatc if this is an issue, I would throw your normal rules out of the window. Will she eat jam sandwiches? for example. Would she eat school dinners (mine would rather have pasta school dinner than sandwich)

I would also try some sort of incentive - if you can eat half of your lunch, we can have/do x when you get home.

My son is HORRENDOUS when he is hungry. If she is behaving badly in the afternoons, then I would talk to the teacher and put the blame on the food issue.

I know that lunch is done by MDA etc, but if it is a behaviour issue, then you and the teacher can come up with a care plan to try and sort it.

ByTheWay1 · 03/12/2012 15:07

I'm a mid day supervisor at my DDs' school - and we tell the kids to eat their sandwiches first (or parents do complain if everything else is eaten but not the sandwiches)....

but if you think someone is there actively watching each child eat you are mistaken.... we have 3 to cover the hall and 3 outside.....

the 3 to cover the hall - one covers 60 reception children, 1 covers hot dinners and 1 the rest... (200 in hall in total at any one time with 450 to get through lunch in 1 hour) that has to include all the packet opening, fruit opening, spoon finding, lunchbox opening, bayby bel peeling (innocent bloomin smoothy straw putting-in), spillage clearing, first aid, taking to the toilet, watching the 3 who muck around, tidying up in between (rolling lunchbreak with classes coming in when space is free), and dealing with accidents and due to usual winter vomiting bug - cleaning up puke (only one this lunchtime...)

telling little "X" to go back and eat something because her mum said she went home with all her lunch and could we "watch her" - MIGHT get done IF someone knows who she is, is not actually busy and notices when little "X" leaves and does not believe little "X" when she says I'm not hungry/I feel sick/I've already eaten my sausages/fruit/wrap/other stuff we can't corroborate....

steppemum · 03/12/2012 16:06

ByTheWay - I have a lot of sympathy, but if this is causing behaviour issues, then there can be a plan, which doesn't have to be dependent on what happens in the lunchroom.
A plan might consist for example of her showing her lunch box to TA straight after lunch, and getting sticker if sandwich is eaten, and if not, allowing her to eat it then in the classroom.

Rudolphstolemycarrots · 03/12/2012 16:16

I think its highly unlikely that a child will starve if they choose not to eat their lunch. Maybe DD could help you make the sandwiches?

sagandswing · 04/12/2012 14:39

Ok thanks!, Dd is eating her sandwiches again. seems much happier when leaving school.

Just wanted to see what other mums think, I personaly think it would be best for a child to eat something rather than nothing as Dd's behaviour can change for various reasons (like most) but more so when she is hungry so to stop her from eating anything at all for the sake of a sandwich is just building a rod for their own backs really. I have been informed by my older Ds that there is a "shouty" dinnerlady dragon in the hall who DOES stand over the children to be sure they are eating their sandwiches, so if this is true I can imagine that they wouldn't be allowed to eat anything else if they don't eat their sandwiches

We do have similar rules at home but we are flexable dependent on Dc's moods. Some good suggestions for different ideas in lunch box which I will definatly try.

OP posts:
ImaginateMum · 04/12/2012 18:58

I have a DD who sometimes eats loads and sometimes very little. All her lunch containers are labelled "Please let DD leave this if she chooses". She knows it says that, and if anyone pushes her to eat more then she tells them / shows them. I think this is the most realistic way to cope with the situation.

Bosgrove · 04/12/2012 19:23

My 3 year old is a sandwich refuser, she likes them, but only under her own terms. In fact the last note I got in her lunch bag said that she didn't eat her sandwich, orange (satuma), raisins or biscuit.

I think it would have been quicker to say what she did eat... they encourage her to eat her sandwich and fruit, before her sweet bit, but wouldn't stop her.

As for encouraging her to eat her sandwich, if I use a cookie cutter and cut her sandwich into shapes she eats it a lot more of it. The gingerbreadman cutter is really popular.

The preschool staff have said that I have too much time on my hands.

ByTheWay1 · 05/12/2012 09:15

ImaginateMum I wish there were more packed lunch makers who did that - just a note saying "it's ok to leave some" , or "I put lots of choice in - not expected to eat it all" - would make our job so much easier..... so long as they do try to eat some of their "main" - sandwich/wrap/pasta whatever - otherwise we'd get 400 kids just eating their treat.... and probably about 250 angry parents....

lljkk · 05/12/2012 09:31

OP: If she were mine I would probably cut the snacks completely, provide just sarnies & a drink, & offer snacky things after school, instead. Get her to help make the sarnies sounds great idea to me. Doesn't sound like she needs snacks AND sarnies (mine don't, either).

It's fair enough to raise your concerns, BUT I agree that it's unrealistic to expect the school to always see that you get what you want.

I do supply midday cover & would say we are understaffed, too. Very hard to make sure every single child has eaten properly. We try to check each and every one, nonetheless.

It worries me that the children need fresh air, too. Last week a 4yo refused to eat just one more of his tiny sarnie squares. He was resolute for half an hour, he missed all the outside playtime, and still did not touch the sarnie or anything else in his lunchbox. So little achieved. Would have bothered me a lot had it been my 4yo that missed all the lunchtime play.

Fuzzymum1 · 05/12/2012 10:07

Ours are encouraged to eat their sandwiches/wrap/other similar things first but are never told they can't eat their other bits f they don't.

learnandsay · 05/12/2012 20:36

Here's something strange: Mine never eats the sandwiches that I pack her, bread & butter and also one honey, the ones she asks for. But since I've been providing a tiny jar of four olives and three gherkins she has started eating the sandwiches!! (I'm not going to talk to her about it for fear of jinxing the situation, but my pet theory is that she's spreading the "picnic" out snacking on the things that she likes, realising that she actually is hungry after all, and eating her sandwiches.) God alone knows what's really going on. But I bought a monster jar of gherkins just in case.

Taffeta · 05/12/2012 20:44

I can't believe I let DS get to Year 4 with the same packed lunch sandwich issues, coming out of school at the end of the day ravenous and absolutely foul before I realised the answer was sitting under my nose all the time.

He has been having school dinners for the last 3 weeks and is a different child.

nickelbabylyinginamanger · 05/12/2012 20:50

I'm a nasty witch when I'm hungry .
i didn't used to de, but since i had dd i can't function. i even bang into things.
i personally think that if the lunxhbox isn't full of "treats" then it diesn't matter what order they're eaten.
if i put in 2 types of carbs then that would be easier - say a sandwich and pitta dips maybe or cheese straws or a savoury muffins...

Tgger · 05/12/2012 21:06

DS has school dinners now. He used to do packed lunch last year and it was always very boring, 3 sandwiches, an apple and a biscuit/similar. He always ate his sandwiches Grin. They were often jam Shock- on wholemeal bread Smile.

Occassionally I would add other things if requested and would often find them uneaten. Guess he likes sandwiches!

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UniS · 07/12/2012 21:00

Have you tried packing nothing snacky and just the sandwiches. a small lunch may get eaten. This worked for DS, who was spending FOREVER eating the extras very slowly and not knuckling down and eating in less than 30 mins.

Or if your kid simply dislikes sandwiches, it's not the end of the world to give them oat cakes or crackers as their carbs.

AbbyR1973 · 07/12/2012 21:40

At home if DS's didn't eat their sandwiches, then they wouldn't be getting any snacks things. Usually the sandwich is the most healthy part of lunch unless I've done salad or vegetable crudités. Both nursery and school encourage DS's to eat their sandwiches. Once DS2 at nursery spotted a treat in his lunch bag he wanted first and refused to eat his sandwiches- by all accounts a full on tantrum! The nursery held their ground exactly as I would have done at home and I back them all the way.
DS's take different sandwiches every day, sometimes it's their favourite, sometimes it might be something they like but not a favourite either way if they choose not to eat it its up to them but they won't be having something else instead. It's the same at dinner time. We all eat the same thing. If they don't fancy it that's fine but they don't get to choose something else instead. No big fuss made about it.
Funnily enough neither DS is even slightly fussy and they eat pretty much anything.

BarbarianMum · 07/12/2012 21:50

Another one who withholds treats if sandwiches are not eaten. I'm assuming that no parent would actually send sandwiches if there wasn't the expectation that the child would eat at least some of them.

Disagree that 'anything is better than nothing' unless all the options are nutritious. A packet of crisps and a choccy biscuit doesn't really make for great afternoon behavior either.

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