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It’s National School Lunch Week

Students eating lunch together in school cafeteria

National School Lunch Week (October 9-13th) recognizes the benefits of student participation in school meal programs. CDC Healthy Schools has information and resources schools and parents can use to help support a healthy school nutrition environment.

Most US children attend school for six hours a day and consume as much as half of their daily calories at school. Eating nutritious meals while they are at school keeps students healthy and ready to learn.

School Meal Programs

Schools play an important role in shaping lifelong healthy eating habits by offering meals with important nutrients. Many schools provide students with meals through federal school meal programs including the National School Lunch Program and the School Breakfast Program. All students can participate in school meal programs. Some students are eligible to receive free or reduced-price meals. School meals offer milk, fruit, vegetables, whole grains and key nutrients like calcium and fiber. Learn more about healthy eating in schools and the benefits of school meals.

Lunch lady serving salad to student

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Nutrition and Academic Achievement

Healthy students are better learners. Research shows that nutrition impacts student achievement. Student participation in the School Breakfast Program is associated with higher academic grades and standardized test scores, reduced absenteeism, and improved memory. This fact sheet [480 KB] shows the connection between eating habits and academic grades. More information on the link between health and academic achievement can be found here.

Promoting Healthy Eating

Schools are an ideal setting to teach students to practice healthy habits when it comes to making food and beverage choices. Schools can use the Whole School, Whole Community, Whole Child (WSCC) approach to promote these positive health behaviors. Schools can use resources on this page to help provide nutritious snacks outside of the federal school meal programs. Parents can take part in promoting healthy eating in school by requesting that healthy food choices are available at school events and celebrations and that nutritious foods and beverages are sold during school fundraisers. CDC’s Parents for Healthy Schools gives more ideas on how to get involved.

CDC’s Comprehensive Framework for Addressing the School Nutrition Environment and Services [2.95 MB] provides school nutrition professionals, school health professionals, administrators, teachers, and parents detailed information on the different parts of a school nutrition environment and how, together, they influence a students’ access to healthy foods and beverages at school.

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