Sarah Ford | March 3, 2015

Hunger in Our Schools

By Kristen Bell, No Kid Hungry Supporter

As the mother of two little girls, I think a lot about what their lives will be like, and my responsibility to protect them, nourish them and give them the best start I can, every single day. And it’s not just about my daughters. I know that our country needs every kid to grow up smart, healthy and strong.

But there are so many parents out there who aren’t as fortunate as I am, and so many children who come to school each day hungry and tired. There’sÌýÌýfrom No Kid Hungry about kids facing hunger at school, and their research reveals a national crisis.

Three out of every four educators they surveyed said their students regularly come to school hungry, and many of them say it happens at least once a week. When kids come to school with empty stomachs, they can’t concentrate, they lack energy, they disrupt class and — of course — their grades suffer.

It’s a terrible problem, one so vast and so deeply connected to poverty and inequality that it seems insolvable.

But it isn’t. There is a solution, and it’s a simple one. Breakfast.

Almost every child facing hunger attends a public school, where they get a healthy lunch, for free or at a reduced price, every day. The system, the staff and the infrastructure to feed daily meals to kidsÌýis already in place, in our neighborhood schools. Most importantly, federal funding exists to pay for not just lunches at school, but breakfast too.

So why aren’t more kids eating breakfast at school?

>> Support Share Our Strength’s No Kid Hungry Campaign

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