家长对学校膳食的看法以及不同种族和族裔对学校膳食看法的差异

Monica D. Zuercher, Juliana F W Cohen, P. Ohri-Vachaspati, Christina A Hecht, Kenneth Hecht, Michele Polacsek, Deborah A. Olarte, Margaret Read, Anisha I Patel, Marlene B. Schwartz, Leah E Chapman, Dania Orta-Aleman, L. Ritchie, Wendi Gosliner
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摘要

家长对学校膳食的看法会影响学生的参与度和对学校膳食政策的总体支持。目前,人们对普及免费校餐(UFSM)政策下家长对学校膳食的看法知之甚少。我们评估了加利福尼亚州家长在 COVID-19 应急响应期间对学校膳食的看法,以及不同种族/族裔的家长对学校膳食的看法是否有所不同。在 1110 位加州幼儿园至 12 年级学生家长中,大多数家长表示学校供餐有利于他们的家庭,为他们节省了金钱(81.6%)、时间(79.2%)和压力(75.0%)。很少有家长表示他们的孩子会因为吃学校膳食而感到难为情(11.7%),但白人学生的家长比西班牙裔学生的家长表示这种情况更多。许多家长表示他们的孩子喜欢和朋友一起吃午餐(64.7%);大约一半的家长认为他们的孩子有足够的时间吃饭(54.2%)。认为学校午餐质量好(36.9%)、美味(39.6%)或健康(44.0%)的家长较少。与白人学生家长相比,西班牙裔和亚裔学生家长对学校膳食质量、口味和健康的看法较差。家长们认为学校膳食有益于他们的家庭,但需要在政策方面做出努力,确保学校拥有解决文化适宜性问题所需的资源。学校应解决家长对膳食的看法,以优化参与、营养安全和健康。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Parent perceptions of school meals and how perceptions differ by race and ethnicity
Parental perceptions of school meals can affect student participation and overall support for school meal policies. Little is known about parental school meal perceptions under universal free school meals (UFSM) policies. We assessed California parents' perceptions of school meals during the COVID-19 emergency response with federally funded UFSM and whether perceptions differed by race/ethnicity. Among 1110 California parents of K–12 students, most reported school meals benefit their families, saving them money (81.6%), time (79.2%), and stress (75.0%). Few reported that their child would be embarrassed to eat school meals (11.7%), but more parents of White students than Hispanic students reported this. Many parents reported that their child likes to eat lunch to be with friends (64.7%); about half felt their child has enough time to eat (54.2%). Fewer parents perceived school lunches to be of good quality (36.9%), tasty (39.6%), or healthy (44.0%). Parents of Hispanic and Asian students had less favorable perceptions of school meal quality, taste, and healthfulness than parents of White students. Parents report that school meals benefit their families, but policy efforts are needed to ensure schools have the resources needed to address cultural appropriateness. Schools should address parental perceptions of meals to optimize participation, nutrition security, and health.
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