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Friday, May 30, 2014

This Week In Education: Thompson: Michelle Obama, Meanwitchs and Stinkburgers

This Week In Education: Thompson: Michelle Obama, Meanwitchs and Stinkburgers:



Thompson: Michelle Obama, Meanwitchs and Stinkburgers

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 I love Michelle Obama as much as I remain loyal to her husband, despite his awful test and punish education policy. When the First Lady is attacked, I am angered almost as much as when the Obama administration assaults public education.

The issues underlying both Michelle Obama's Let's Move healthy schools campaign, and President Obama's corporate school reform are equally complicated.
Time Magazine's Jay Newton-Small, in Michelle Obama Bites Back at Critics of Her Healthy School Lunch Standards, reports that a million fewer students ate school lunches in the first year of the program. The bigger problem is anecdotes and twitter photo campaigns featuring students who want their junk food back.
In light of the House Republicans' assault on anti-obesity efforts, Burkhard Bilger's 2006 New Yorker article, The Lunch Room Rebellion, should now be reread. As the First Lady explains, the "stakes couldn't be higher" in the battle to improve children's health, so the fight is worth it. But, given the difficulty Bilger described in providing nutritious meals in the affluent Berkeley, California schools, we must prepare for a long, frustrating struggle.  
Bilger told how a "haute cuisine chef," Ann Cooper, got schooled when she brought nutritious meals that were a hit in a progressive private school to a public system. Cooper's biggest problem was that children's food tastes (not unlike some of their learning habits) are established before they enter school. But, a seemingly absurd combination of political and institutional dynamics created unforeseen complications, even in a system where only 40% of students were eligible for free or reduced lunch.
In some ways, Cooper's approach to healthy meals resembled the methods of accountability-driven reformers, who disastrously intruded into education policy. But, she also developed some very different methods. 
On one hand, the newcomer to public schools sought to rapidly scale up policies without having a commensurate increase in funding. In doing so, she inevitably annoyed lunch room employees This Week In Education: Thompson: Michelle Obama, Meanwitchs and Stinkburgers: