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TO EDUCATION, FOOD, AND HEALTH EDITORS:
1 Million More: No Kid Hungry Campaign Launches National Breakfast
Challenge
WASHINGTON, March 17, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The No Kid
Hungry campaign today challenged America's leaders to connect 1
million more low-income children in this nation to school breakfast
over the next two years. Currently, just over half of our nation's
kids who need a free or reduced-price breakfast are getting one.
"Eating a healthy breakfast dramatically changes kids' lives," said
Academy Award-winning actor, Jeff Bridges, national spokesperson for
the No Kid Hungry campaign. "Too many kids are starting the day too
hungry to learn. Today we're challenging the nation to join us in
connecting a million more children to breakfast in the classroom in
the next two years."
Schools are ground zero for seeing hunger and experiencing its
effects. In a recent survey conducted by the No Kid Hungry campaign,
three out of four public school teachers say they currently have kids
in their classrooms who are struggling with hunger.
School breakfast is a critical but underutilized national program that
bears a direct impact of children's academic achievement and health.
Research conducted by Deloitte Consulting shows that when kids
consistently eat breakfast at school, attendance rates improve and
math test scores rise up to 17.5%. Parents, kids, and school leaders
cite reasons such as stigma of eating breakfast alone in the
cafeteria, signaling you are poor (unlike lunch where all kids eat
together); transportation problems (buses not delivering kids to
school in time for breakfast); and misperceptions about the value of
serving breakfast in new ways (such as serving it in the classroom as
part of first period) as reasons why more low-income kids aren't
getting this vital meal as intended.
"Making sure kids are eating a daily breakfast is a big step toward
ending childhood hunger," said Share Our Strength founder and CEO Bill
Shore. "It's time we close the breakfast gap. We can unlock better
health and academic achievement for all our kids through simple acts
like moving breakfast to be an integrated part of the school day."
The No Kid Hungry campaign currently works with elected officials,
corporate leaders, school officials, and others in the non-profit
community on innovative strategies like moving breakfast out of the
cafeteria and into the classroom. The new website,
NoKidHungry.org/Breakfast, has tested strategies, advocacy tools and
research that can help communities more rapidly connect more
low-income children to this critical morning meal.
Since the launch of the No Kid Hungry campaign, 2 million more
low-income kids are getting a healthy school breakfast and states
including Maryland, Colorado, Arkansas and Texashave passed
legislation to ensure more kids get breakfast in school daily. New
legislation is pending in states like Nebraska and New Jersey. It's
time to bring that forward momentum to the national level.
Today the No Kid Hungry campaign is challenging America's leaders -
governors, mayors, school boards, principals and others - to stand up
for kids and use these tools to help close the "breakfast gap" in
their own communities. Together, we have the potential to connect 1
million more low-income children in this nation to school breakfast
over the next two school years.
-- To hear about the power of breakfast through a principal's eyes,
click here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azXZhXj6j3Y
-- To hear two students talk about the effect school breakfast has on
their classroom success, click here - https://vimeo.com/87520721
-- To talk to Mr. Shore about the No Kid Hungry Breakfast Challenge,
local stories on how schools are serving breakfast in the classroom or
after the bell, or other issues surrounding childhood hunger, please
contact Christy Felling at 202.320.4483 or cfelling@strength.org.
About Share Our Strength's No Kid Hungry Campaign No child should grow
up hungry in America, but one in five children struggles with hunger.
Share Our Strength's No Kid Hungry@ campaign is ending childhood
hunger in America by connecting kids in need with nutritious food and
teaching families how to cook healthy, affordable meals. You can help
surround kids with healthy food where they live, learn and play.
The No Kid Hungry campaign's work to increase school breakfast
participation is generously supported by national sponsor Kellogg's
Corporate Citizenship Fund.
Share Our Strength's national No Kid Hungry efforts are supported by
core partners Arby's Foundation, Food Network and the Walmart
Foundation.
Pledge to make No Kid Hungry a reality at NoKidHungry.org.
Contact: Christy Felling Phone: 202.320.4483
Email:cfelling@strength.org
SOURCE Share Our Strength's No Kid Hungry Campaign
-0- 03/17/2014
CO: Share Our Strength's No Kid Hungry Campaign
ST: District of Columbia
IN: FOD EDU HEA
SU: CHI NPT AVO
PRN
-- DC83720 --
0000 03/17/2014 13:00:00 EDT http://www.prnewswire.com
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