Want kids to learn well Feed them well Sam Kass

Translator: Joseph Geni
Reviewer: Camille Martínez

I am a chef

and a food policy guy,

but I come from a whole
family of teachers.

My sister is a special ed
teacher in Chicago.

My father just retired
after 25 years teaching fifth grade.

My aunt and uncle were professors.

My cousins all teach.

Everybody in my family, basically,
teaches except for me.

They taught me that the only way
to get the right answers

is to ask the right questions.

So what are the right questions

when it comes to improving
the educational outcomes for our children?

There’s obviously
many important questions,

but I think the following
is a good place to start:

What do we think the connection is

between a child’s growing mind

and their growing body?

What can we expect our kids to learn

if their diets are full of sugar
and empty of nutrients?

What can they possibly learn

if their bodies
are literally going hungry?

And with all the resources
that we are pouring into schools,

we should stop and ask ourselves:

Are we really setting
our kids up for success?

Now, a few years ago,

I was a judge on a cooking
competition called “Chopped.”

Four chefs compete
with mystery ingredients

to see who can cook the best dishes.

Except for this episode –
it was a very special one.

Instead of four overzealous chefs
trying to break into the limelight –

something that I would know
nothing about –

(Laughter)

these chefs were school chefs;

you know, the women that you used
to call “lunch ladies,”

but the ones I insist
we call “school chefs.”

Now, these women – God bless
these women –

spend their day cooking
for thousands of kids,

breakfast and lunch,
with only $2.68 per lunch,

with only about a dollar of that
actually going to the food.

In this episode,

the main-course
mystery ingredient was quinoa.

Now, I know it’s been a long time

since most of you have had a school lunch,

and we’ve made a lot
of progress on nutrition,

but quinoa still is not a staple
in most school cafeterias.

(Laughter)

So this was a challenge.

But the dish that I will never forget
was cooked by a woman

named Cheryl Barbara.

Cheryl was the nutrition director

at High School in the Community
in Connecticut.

She cooked this delicious pasta.

It was amazing.

It was a pappardelle with Italian sausage,

kale, Parmesan cheese.

It was delicious, like,
restaurant-quality good, except –

she basically just threw the quinoa,
pretty much uncooked,

into the dish.

It was a strange choice,

and it was super crunchy.

(Laughter)

So I took on the TV accusatory judge thing
that you’re supposed to do,

and I asked her why she did that.

Cheryl responded, “Well, first,
I don’t know what quinoa is.”

(Laughter)

“But I do know that it’s a Monday,

and that in my school,
at High School in the Community,

I always cook pasta.”

See, Cheryl explained
that for many of her kids,

there were no meals on the weekends.

No meals on Saturday.

No meals on Sunday, either.

So she cooked pasta
because she wanted to make sure

she cooked something she knew
her children would eat.

Something that would stick
to their ribs, she said.

Something that would fill them up.

Cheryl talked about how,
by the time Monday came,

her kids' hunger pangs were so intense

that they couldn’t even begin
to think about learning.

Food was the only thing on their mind.

The only thing.

And unfortunately, the stats –
they tell the same story.

So, let’s put this
into the context of a child.

And we’re going to focus on

the most important meal
of the day, breakfast.

Meet Allison.

She’s 12 years old,

she’s smart as a whip

and she wants to be a physicist
when she grows up.

If Allison goes to a school
that serves a nutritious breakfast

to all of their kids,

here’s what’s going to follow.

Her chances of getting a nutritious meal,

one with fruit and milk,
one lower in sugar and salt,

dramatically increase.

Allison will have a lower rate
of obesity than the average kid.

She’ll have to visit the nurse less.

She’ll have lower levels
of anxiety and depression.

She’ll have better behavior.

She’ll have better attendance,
and she’ll show up on time more often.

Why?

Well, because there’s a good meal
waiting for her at school.

Overall, Allison is in much better health

than the average school kid.

So what about that kid

who doesn’t have a nutritious
breakfast waiting for him?

Well, meet Tommy.

He’s also 12. He’s a wonderful kid.

He wants to be a doctor.

By the time Tommy is in kindergarten,

he’s already underperforming in math.

By the time he’s in third grade,

he’s got lower math and reading scores.

By the time he’s 11,

it’s more likely that Tommy will have
to have repeated a grade.

Research shows that kids
who do not have consistent nourishment,

particularly at breakfast,

have poor cognitive function overall.

So how widespread is this problem?

Well, unfortunately, it’s pervasive.

Let me give you two stats

that seem like they’re on opposite
ends of the issue,

but are actually two sides
of the same coin.

On the one hand,

one in six Americans are food insecure,

including 16 million children –
almost 20 percent –

are food insecure.

In this city alone, in New York City,

474,000 kids under the age of 18
face hunger every year.

It’s crazy.

On the other hand,

diet and nutrition is the number one cause
of preventable death and disease

in this country, by far.

And fully a third of the kids
that we’ve been talking about tonight

are on track to have diabetes
in their lifetime.

Now, what’s hard
to put together but is true

is that, many times,
these are the same children.

So they fill up on the unhealthy
and cheap calories

that surround them in their communities
and that their families can afford.

But then by the end of the month,

food stamps run out
or hours get cut at work,

and they don’t have the money
to cover the basic cost of food.

But we should be able
to solve this problem, right?

We know what the answers are.

As part of my work at the White House,
we instituted a program

that for all schools that had
40 percent more low-income kids,

we could serve breakfast and lunch
to every kid in that school.

For free.

This program has been
incredibly successful,

because it helped us overcome
a very difficult barrier

when it came to getting kids
a nutritious breakfast.

And that was the barrier of stigma.

See, schools serve
breakfast before school,

and it was only available
for the poor kids.

So everybody knew who was poor
and who needed government help.

Now, all kids, no matter how much
or how little their parents make,

have a lot of pride.

So what happened?

Well, the schools that have
implemented this program

saw an increase in math and reading
scores by 17.5 percent.

17.5 percent.

And research shows that when kids
have a consistent, nutritious breakfast,

their chances of graduating
increase by 20 percent.

20 percent.

When we give our kids
the nourishment they need,

we give them the chance to thrive,

both in the classroom and beyond.

Now, you don’t have to trust me on this,

but you should talk to Donna Martin.

I love Donna Martin.

Donna Martin is the school nutrition
director at Burke County

in Waynesboro, Georgia.

Burke County is one
of the poorest districts

in the fifth-poorest state in the country,

and about 100 percent of Donna’s students
live at or below the poverty line.

A few years ago,

Donna decided to get out ahead
of the new standards that were coming,

and overhaul her nutrition standards.

She improved and added
fruit and vegetables and whole grains.

She served breakfast in the classroom
to all of her kids.

And she implemented a dinner program.

Why?

Well, many of her kids didn’t have
dinner when they went home.

So how did they respond?

Well, the kids loved the food.

They loved the better nutrition,

and they loved not being hungry.

But Donna’s biggest supporter
came from an unexpected place.

His name from Eric Parker,

and he was the head football coach
for the Burke County Bears.

Now, Coach Parker had coached
mediocre teams for years.

The Bears often ended
in the middle of the pack –

a big disappointment in one
of the most passionate football states

in the Union.

But the year Donna changed the menus,

the Bears not only won their division,

they went on to win
the state championship,

beating the Peach County Trojans

28-14.

(Laughter)

And Coach Parker,

he credited that championship
to Donna Martin.

When we give our kids
the basic nourishment,

they’re going to thrive.

And it’s not just
up to the Cheryl Barbaras

and the Donna Martins of the world.

It’s on all of us.

And feeding our kids the basic nutrition
is just the starting point.

What I’ve laid out is really a model

for so many of the most pressing
issues that we face.

If we focus on the simple goal
of properly nourishing ourselves,

we could see a world
that is more stable and secure;

we could dramatically improve
our economic productivity;

we could transform our health care

and we could go a long way

in ensuring that the Earth can provide
for generations to come.

Food is that place
where our collective efforts

can have the greatest impact.

So we have to ask ourselves:
What is the right question?

What would happen

if we fed ourselves more nutritious,
more sustainably grown food?

What would be the impact?

Cheryl Barbara,

Donna Martin,

Coach Parker and the Burke County Bears –

I think they know the answer.

Thank you guys so very much.

(Applause)

译者:Joseph Geni
审稿人:Camille Martínez

我是一名厨师

和食品政策专家,

但我来自一个
教师家庭。

我姐姐
是芝加哥的一名特殊教育老师。

我父亲
在教五年级 25 年后刚刚退休。

我的姑姑和叔叔是教授。

我的堂兄弟们都教书。

基本上,我家里的每个人都
教书,除了我。

他们告诉我,
获得正确答案的唯一方法

是提出正确的问题。

那么,在

改善
我们孩子的教育成果方面,什么是正确的问题呢?

显然有
许多重要的问题,

但我认为以下
是一个很好的起点:

我们认为

孩子成长中的思想

和成长中的身体之间有什么联系?

如果我们的

孩子的饮食中富含
糖分而缺乏营养,我们可以期望他们学到什么?

如果他们的
身体真的饿了,他们能学到什么?

有了
我们投入学校的所有资源,

我们应该停下来问问自己:

我们真的
让我们的孩子走向成功吗?

现在,几年前,

我是一个
名为“切碎”的烹饪比赛的评委。

四位厨师
与神秘食材比拼,

看谁能烹制出最好的菜肴。

除了这一集——
那是非常特别的一集。

而不是四个过分热心的厨师
试图闯入聚光灯——

我对此
一无所知——

(笑声)

这些厨师是学校厨师;

你知道,那些你
曾经称之为“午餐女士”的女性,

但我坚持
我们称之为“学校厨师”的女性。

现在,这些女性——上帝保佑
这些女性——

每天都在
为成千上万的孩子做饭,包括

早餐和午餐
,每顿午餐只有 2.68

美元,而实际上只有大约 1 美元
用于食物。

在这一集中

,主菜的
神秘成分是藜麦。

现在,我知道

你们大多数人已经很久没有吃过学校午餐了

,我们
在营养方面取得了很大进展,

但藜麦仍然不是
大多数学校食堂的主食。

(笑声)

所以这是一个挑战。

但我永远不会忘记
的菜是由一个名叫谢丽尔芭芭拉的女人做的

谢丽尔是康涅狄格

州社区高中的营养主任

她做了这道美味的意大利面。

这是惊人的。

这是意大利香肠、

羽衣甘蓝、帕尔马干酪的意大利面。

它很好吃,就像
餐厅质量一样好,除了——

她基本上只是把
几乎没煮过的藜麦

扔进了盘子里。

这是一个奇怪的选择,

而且超级脆。

(笑声)

所以我接受了你应该做的电视指控法官的事情

,我问她为什么这样做。

谢丽尔回答说:“嗯,首先,
我不知道藜麦是什么。”

(笑声)

“但我知道今天是星期一

,在我的学校,
在社区的高中,

我总是做意大利面。”

看,谢丽尔解释
说,对于她的许多孩子来说,

周末没有饭菜。

周六不吃饭。

星期天也不吃饭。

所以她做了意大利面,
因为她想确保

她做了一些她知道
她的孩子会吃的东西。 她说,

有些东西会粘
在他们的肋骨上。

可以填满他们的东西。

谢丽尔谈到,
到周一到来时,

她的孩子们的饥饿感是如此强烈

,以至于他们甚至无法
开始考虑学习。

食物是他们唯一想到的。

唯一的事情。

不幸的是,统计数据——
它们讲述的是同一个故事。

所以,让我们把它
放到一个孩子的环境中。

我们将专注

于一天中最重要的一
餐,早餐。

认识艾莉森。

她今年12岁,

聪明如鞭子


长大后想当物理学家。

如果艾莉森去一所为所有孩子
提供营养早餐的学校

,接下来会发生什么。

她获得营养餐的机会

,包括水果和牛奶
,低糖和低盐的一餐,

显着增加。

艾莉森
的肥胖率低于普通孩子。

她将不得不少去看护士。


的焦虑和抑郁程度会降低。

她会有更好的表现。

她的出勤率会更高,
而且会更准时出现。

为什么?

嗯,因为在学校有一顿美餐
等着她。

总的来说,艾莉森的健康状况

比普通学生要好得多。

那么,

那个没有营养
早餐等着他的孩子呢?

好吧,见见汤米。

他也是 12 岁。他是一个很棒的孩子。

他想成为一名医生。

汤米上幼儿园时,

他的数学成绩已经很差了。

到他上三年级时,

他的数学和阅读成绩较低。

到他 11 岁时

,汤米更有可能
不得不重读一个年级。

研究表明,
缺乏持续营养的孩子,

尤其是早餐时

,整体认知功能较差。

那么这个问题有多普遍呢?

好吧,不幸的是,它无处不在。

让我给你两个统计数据

,它们看起来像是
在问题的两端,

但实际上
是同一枚硬币的两个方面。

一方面,六分之一的美国人粮食不安全,

其中包括 1600 万儿童 -
几乎 20%

  • 粮食不安全。

仅在纽约市,每年就有

474,000 名 18 岁以下的儿童
面临饥饿。

这很疯狂。

另一方面,到目前为止,

饮食和营养是该国
可预防的死亡和疾病的第一大原因

我们今晚谈论的孩子中,足足有三分之一的孩子

在他们的一生中都会患上糖尿病。

现在,
很难拼凑但真实

的是,很多时候,
这些都是同一个孩子。

因此,他们补充了社区中围绕他们的不健康
和廉价的卡路里


而且他们的家人可以负担得起。

但到了月底,

食品券用完
或工作时间被缩短

,他们没有
钱支付基本的食品费用。

但是我们应该
能够解决这个问题,对吧?

我们知道答案是什么。

作为我在白宫工作的一部分,
我们制定了一项计划

,为所有
低收入儿童增加 40% 的学校,

我们可以
为该学校的每个孩子提供早餐和午餐。

免费。

这个项目
非常成功,

因为它帮助我们克服

了让孩子们
吃营养早餐的一个非常困难的障碍。

这就是污名的障碍。

看,学校
在放学前提供早餐,

而且只提供
给穷孩子。

所以每个人都知道谁是穷人
,谁需要政府的帮助。

现在,所有的孩子,无论
他们的父母赚了多少,

都非常自豪。

所以发生了什么事?

嗯,
实施该计划的学校

的数学和阅读
成绩提高了 17.5%。

17.5%。

研究表明,当孩子
们享用一致且营养丰富的早餐时,

他们毕业的机会会
增加 20%。

20%。

当我们为孩子提供
他们需要的营养时,

我们就让他们有机会

在课堂内外茁壮成长。

现在,你不必相信我,

但你应该和唐娜马丁谈谈。

我爱唐娜马丁。

唐娜·马丁是

佐治亚州韦恩斯伯勒市伯克县的学校营养主任。

伯克县
是该国第五贫穷州中最贫穷的地区

之一

,唐娜大约 100% 的学生
生活在或低于贫困线。

几年前,

唐娜决定超越
即将到来的新标准

,彻底改革她的营养标准。

她改进并添加了
水果、蔬菜和全谷物。

她在教室里
为她所有的孩子提供早餐。

她实施了一个晚餐计划。

为什么?

嗯,她的许多孩子
回家时都没有吃晚饭。

那么他们是如何回应的呢?

嗯,孩子们喜欢这里的食物。

他们喜欢更好的营养

,他们喜欢不饿。

但唐娜最大的支持者
来自一个意想不到的地方。

他的名字来自埃里克帕克

,他是
伯克县熊队的主教练。

现在,帕克教练多年来一直执教
平庸的球队。

熊队经常
以中游收场——对于联盟中最热情的足球

州之一来说,这是一个很大的失望

但是在唐娜改变菜单的那一年

,熊队不仅赢得了他们的分区,

他们还赢得
了州冠军,

以 28-14 击败了桃县特洛伊人队

(笑声)

还有帕克教练,

他把冠军
归功于唐娜·马丁。

当我们为孩子提供
基本的营养时,

他们就会茁壮成长。

这不仅仅
取决于世界上的 Cheryl Barbaras

和 Donna Martins。

它在我们所有人身上。

为我们的孩子提供基本营养
只是起点。

我所列出的确实是我们面临

的许多最紧迫
问题的模型。

如果我们专注于
适当滋养自己的简单目标,

我们可以看到一个
更加稳定和安全的世界;

我们可以显着提高
我们的经济生产力;

我们可以改变我们的医疗保健

,我们可以

在确保地球能够为子孙后代提供食物
方面走很长一段路。

食物是
我们的集体努力

可以产生最大影响的地方。

所以我们必须问自己:
什么是正确的问题?

如果我们给自己喂食更有营养、
更可持续种植的食物,会发生什么?

会有什么影响?

谢丽尔芭芭拉、

唐娜马丁、

帕克教练和伯克郡熊队——

我想他们知道答案。

非常感谢你们。

(掌声)