Ohh look is that “Sir Kid Starver” feeding the kids.
Egg on the face of the right (yet again) and their silly nicknames.
Thank you Labour, less than a year in and already doing a good job at turning things around.
TheDarkCreed on
Time to be ‘deprived’ to get them kids out the house early and save money.
LeatherPickle on
God the Daily Mirror UI makes it impossible to read the article fully so apologies if its discussed in the article.
Obviously it’s a great plan but has there been any mention of how it’s being rolled out? Will it just fall on the already overworked teachers and support staff to do even more with no support for them?
Captain_Jake_K on
I work in a college and we have free breakfast for all learners. For a lot of the students, they have no guarantee of any caloric intake at home. Some are too busy getting their siblings to school to have anything. I love the rollout of these programmes.
It is never a child’s fault that they are hungry.
deanlr90 on
It’s been proven that kids learn better if they’re not hungry. We need to continue the rollout to all schools. Excellent news
Th0mX on
I’ve seen the benefits first hand of how school providing a breakfast can be.
My daughter’s junior school gives the kids an option to have half a bagel with a light spread of butter when they arrive. Not particularly nutritious, but cheap enough and will give the kids something to keep them going until lunch time.
It encourages the kids to turn up a little earlier (because they are excited to turn up and get a bagel), and ensures they have had some form of breakfast before starting their day.
It’s cheap enough (fits well within 60p a child) and quick to prepare so doesn’t take up too much time for the already overworked school staff.
It’s been popular with the children and the staff seem more than happy to keep it going. I can only see this being a good thing if other schools are getting that encouragement. 🙂
PeteMaverickMitcheIl on
60p per child per breakfast barely covers the cost of the food.
The bigger issue is that most schools needed substantial construction work to be able to cater to hundreds of more children per sitting.
New buildings, new plumbing, upgraded power infrastructure etc.
A school local to me with <600 pupils has had to recieve nearly £1m of upgrades alone (and lose a chunk of their outdoor playing space)
Reasonable_sweetpea on
This is woefully underfunded – schools can’t afford to staff breakfast clubs for the pittance they are offering
Mr-RS182 on
Although I agree with free breakfast clubs I also feel it should be all or nothing. If you going to roll it out then it should be universally available for all children in all areas. I know that then opens a bunch of issues for availability but feel it the right approach.
Go_Nadds on
Make it available to all schools and all pupils. Take away the stigma of free school meals.
GayWolfey on
My wife’s school was one of these chosen. 60p per child is being offered for 6 months if I recall. Doesn’t cover staff costs at all.
11 Comments
Ohh look is that “Sir Kid Starver” feeding the kids.
Egg on the face of the right (yet again) and their silly nicknames.
Thank you Labour, less than a year in and already doing a good job at turning things around.
Time to be ‘deprived’ to get them kids out the house early and save money.
God the Daily Mirror UI makes it impossible to read the article fully so apologies if its discussed in the article.
Obviously it’s a great plan but has there been any mention of how it’s being rolled out? Will it just fall on the already overworked teachers and support staff to do even more with no support for them?
I work in a college and we have free breakfast for all learners. For a lot of the students, they have no guarantee of any caloric intake at home. Some are too busy getting their siblings to school to have anything. I love the rollout of these programmes.
It is never a child’s fault that they are hungry.
It’s been proven that kids learn better if they’re not hungry. We need to continue the rollout to all schools. Excellent news
I’ve seen the benefits first hand of how school providing a breakfast can be.
My daughter’s junior school gives the kids an option to have half a bagel with a light spread of butter when they arrive. Not particularly nutritious, but cheap enough and will give the kids something to keep them going until lunch time.
It encourages the kids to turn up a little earlier (because they are excited to turn up and get a bagel), and ensures they have had some form of breakfast before starting their day.
It’s cheap enough (fits well within 60p a child) and quick to prepare so doesn’t take up too much time for the already overworked school staff.
It’s been popular with the children and the staff seem more than happy to keep it going. I can only see this being a good thing if other schools are getting that encouragement. 🙂
60p per child per breakfast barely covers the cost of the food.
The bigger issue is that most schools needed substantial construction work to be able to cater to hundreds of more children per sitting.
New buildings, new plumbing, upgraded power infrastructure etc.
A school local to me with <600 pupils has had to recieve nearly £1m of upgrades alone (and lose a chunk of their outdoor playing space)
This is woefully underfunded – schools can’t afford to staff breakfast clubs for the pittance they are offering
Although I agree with free breakfast clubs I also feel it should be all or nothing. If you going to roll it out then it should be universally available for all children in all areas. I know that then opens a bunch of issues for availability but feel it the right approach.
Make it available to all schools and all pupils. Take away the stigma of free school meals.
My wife’s school was one of these chosen. 60p per child is being offered for 6 months if I recall. Doesn’t cover staff costs at all.