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Published byDerek Cain Modified over 9 years ago
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NO KID HUNGRY STARTS WITH BREAKFAST Findings by Deloitte and the No Kid Hungry Center for Best Practices on the education, economic and health impact of school breakfast 1 National Sponsor:
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Childhood Hunger is a Serious Problem Hungry Children are at risk of: Poor Health: Being sick more often and are 31% more likely to be hospitalized Diminished Education: Impaired brain development Lower academic achievement No child should grow up hungry in America, but one in five children struggles with hunger. Data Sources: Coleman-Jensen et al. (2012), Nord & Prell (2007), Cook & Jeng (2009) 2
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3 “One of my students this year came up to me during a test and said she was having trouble. When I asked her which question she needed help with, she answered, “I don’t need help with the questions. I need help because I’m hungry and I can’t think.” -- An elementary school teacher in Maryland, “Hunger In Our Schools 2012”
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Overview of the Analysis Connecting Short Term and Long Term Outcomes 4 The No Kid Hungry Center for Best Practices collaborated with Deloitte to identify the impact of increasing participation in the federal School Breakfast Program.
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The School Breakfast Problem Three out of five teachers report that they see students regularly come to school hungry because they’re not getting enough to eat at home. Data Sources: Hunger in Our Schools: Teacher’s Report 2012; No Kid Hungry Center for Best Practices – School Breakfast; US Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics (2010); USDA, Food and Nutrition Service (2010); Food Research and Action Center, School Breakfast Scorecard, January 2013. 11M 21M Number of low-income students eligible for free and reduced-priced school lunch Number of free and reduced- priced school lunch eligible students who participate in the School Breakfast Program 5
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School Breakfast Changes Lives A student who eats school breakfast is less likely to struggle with hunger during their lifetime. On average, students who eat school breakfast have been shown to: Attend 1.5 more days of school per year Achieve 17.5% higher math scores Are 20% more likely to graduate from high school by attending class regularly High school graduates typically earn $10,090 more annually and have a 4% higher employment rate. Data Sources: Murphy (2007); Pinkus (2008); Census Bureau (2010); Bureau of Labor Statistics (2012) 6
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The No Kid Hungry Solution Increasing School Breakfast Program participation has potential to improve test scores, improve school attendance and increase graduation rates nationwide. If 70% of elementary and middle school kids eating a free or reduced-price lunch were also getting school breakfast, this nationally has the potential impact of: To learn the benefits of school breakfast for your area, visit NoKidHungry.org/Breakfast. 3.2M students scoring higher on standardize math tests per year 4.8M fewer school absences per year 807,000 more high school graduates* *The number of students likely to graduate from the original cohort of students included in the SBP increase, assuming they continue to participate in SBP through the 12 th grade. Data Sources: Murphy (2007); Pinkus (2008); Census Bureau (2010) 7
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School Breakfast Innovation Traditionally, students receive school breakfast in the cafeteria before the school day. Moving school breakfast out of the cafeteria and making it a part of the school day ensures more low-income students are able to start the day with a healthy meal. 8
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School Breakfast = Success Research finds a student eating school breakfast tends to do better in school and attend class more frequently, which leads to greater job-readiness and self- sufficiency after high school. These students, therefore, are set on a path to become less likely to struggle with hunger as adults. 9
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An Example of School Breakfast Innovation Impact Calculations on the effect of moving breakfast to the classroom in Maryland show: Schools serving breakfast in the classroom experienced as much as a 7.2% lower rate of chronic absenteeism (missing 20 or more days a year) Students in schools serving breakfast in the classroom were up to 12.5% more likely to pass state standardized math tests Data Sources: Maryland Report Card (2010), Maryland Meals for Achievement (2010) 10 Note: This is an analysis of Maryland Meals for Achievement Schools
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Using Breakfast Research: A Maryland Case Study 11
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The Challenge: In 2008 55% of Eligible Maryland Students did not Participate in School Breakfast MMFA provides universal, in-classroom breakfast for students The Solution: Fully fund Maryland Meals for Achievement
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The Strategy Secure full funding of MMFA through a collaborative, multi-year, research-based, advocacy campaign.
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Messaging Language matters Make it local When you have a good story, tell it more Find other messengers Boil it down 14
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www.BreakfastForSuccess.org
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Results: + $1.8 million in FY 2014 budget Thanks to Governor O’Malley’s leadership, 57,000 additional students will start the day ready to learn next year because they got a nutritious breakfast at school.
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19 Questions?
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