New study finds kids eat more fruits and vegetables if they eat after recess
A small-scale study in Utah finds students increase fruit and vegetable consumption if they’re active before lunch. For decades, school lunch ladies have been puzzling over how to get kids to eat their fruits and vegetables.
January 14, 2015
OREM, Utah — For decades, school lunch ladies have been puzzling over how to get kids to eat their fruits and vegetables. They've tried growing produce on campus and challenging kids to come up with their own recipes. They've even tried paying students to clean their plates.
Now a small-scale study in Utah suggests a simpler solution, one that even mom would love: Why not simply move lunchtime so that it falls after recess?
The new study, appearing in the February issue of the journal Preventive Medicine, shows that waiting until after recess to feed kids increases per-child fruit and veggie consumption by 54% and prompts 45% more students to eat any fruits or vegetables at all. The authors theorize that not only are students hungrier after recess, they're also not as rushed to be "done" with lunch so they can maximize playtime.
Previous research has shown that waiting until after recess to serve lunch prompts kids to eat more and waste less overall. It also makes the lunchroom a calmer, more orderly place.
Researchers from Brigham Young University (BYU) and Cornell University studied first- through sixth-graders at seven schools in Orem, Utah, near Salt Lake City. The school district was in the process of switching the lunch/recess order in some schools, and the researchers realized that the switch presented an opportunity to see if it made a difference in children's fruit and vegetable consumption habits.
"This put us in a unique position to evaluate the impact of a changing recess before lunch since we were already collecting data at the schools making the change as well as some very similar schools nearby," says BYU's Joseph Price. Price and colleague David Just, a behavioral economist at Cornell, were concerned that many students from low-income families who weren't eating fruits and vegetables at home might be repeating the pattern with lunch at school.
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