December 18, 2019
During the holidays and all year long, millions of individuals and families who struggle against hunger are able to access healthy food with support from the federal nutrition programs. To celebrate the nation’s nutrition safety net, FRAC is releasing a seven-part “Remember This December” series that will highlight the impact of seven important federal nutrition programs.
This is the third installment of the series, which focuses on school breakfast. Read the previous installment on school lunch.
The School Breakfast Program provides millions of children a nutritious morning meal each school day. School breakfast is a critical support for struggling families trying to stretch limited resources and provides children a significant portion of the daily nutrition they need to learn and be healthy. Find out more about the impact of school breakfast below:
- School breakfast helps to fuel children’s minds and bodies: Throughout the 2017–2018 school year, nearly 12.5 million low-income children on an average day participated in the School Breakfast Program, equipping them with the nutrition they need to boost their ability to learn effectively; support positive social, emotional, and behavioral development; and improve their health and general well-being.
- School breakfast matters in every corner of the country: The School Breakfast Program operates everywhere, and is important in every community, including rural communities, where students are more likely than their peers in metropolitan areas to live in food-insecure households.
- Schools are making breakfast more accessible through breakfast in the classroom: A growing number of schools are moving breakfast out of the cafeteria and making it part of the school day to ensure that students are able to participate. FRAC has worked with partners to develop tools [1, 2, 3] to support principals and educators in implementing and sustaining Breakfast in the Classroom and other alternative breakfast service models at their schools.
- States are prioritizing school breakfast by enacting legislation to increase participation: Most recently, Maine, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, and Washington joined Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, and West Virginia by passing breakfast expansion legislation.
- Community eligibility is a win for everyone: The Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) is a powerful tool that allows high-poverty schools to offer school breakfast and lunch at no charge to all students. Community eligibility reduces administrative work for schools, increases school meal participation, removes the stigma that can surround accessing a free or reduced-price school breakfast or lunch, and makes it easier for schools to offer breakfast in the classroom. The provision is popular with schools, growing by 14 percent in school year 2018–2019 over the prior school year and reaching over 13.6 million children.
Learn more about school breakfast at FRAC.org, and share our “Remember This December” school meals graphic.
Watch our video on the importance of the federal nutrition programs.