Fighting a Rising Tide of Candy: What’s a Mean Mom to Do?
I got a letter from a reader recently that I want to share:
Hi Denise,
I love your blog. My only child, my son, is 5, and you certainly present an interesting take on many issues that I’ve faced as a mom.
I was wondering whether you had an opinion on the candy culture in elementary schools these days. It seems like every other day my son is coming home with a lollipop that he got from the treat bag for being good. Now, I’m delighted that he’s being good, but enough with the sugar already! I certainly don’t remember being rewarded with candy by my elementary school teachers. I just think it sends the wrong message on so many levels, when we’re trying to educate young people.
So I’m the “mean mommy” who has to ration the candy at home, and who writes to the teacher to ask whether she could please reconsider her rewards. Is this an issue you face?
Thanks, and keep up the good writing,
Patricia
Ah, Patricia. Do I have an opinion on the candy culture in elementary schools? Yeah. Little bit of one. More on that in a moment.
First I want to address Patricia’s dismay over the treat-as-reward compulsion. I have two main problems with that. One is the very notion of connecting a tangible reward with either good behavior or good grades. Not a fan. Turns out, neither are experts you might consult on this issue. A lollipop (or a dollar bill or a collection of raffle tickets that lead to this or that prize) as a reward is a misguided means of motivation. It inevitably and dangerously ties a child’s motivation to do well with the promise of a treat. In psychological parlance, that’s external motivation: the child wants to ace the test or demonstrate good behavior not because it feels good inside, but because he wants the prize.
But the second reason is for the sheer fact that kids have access to way too many treats —in school and eslewhere. Not only is the lollipop Patricia’s son’s teacher gives him a poor way to motivate him to continue his good behavior or whatever, it’s probably just piled on to other stuff he’s handed all week long — at a Cub Scout meeting, say, or after his pee-wee soccer game.
Let me be clear that I’m not against treats, cupcakes, candy or anything like that. But without an effort at moderation, we’re all left either sliding down a slippery slope of cake icing, or banning treats outright.
Which is what our school principal tried, last year — she called down a moratorium on any food in the school outside the cafeteria or the scheduled (hopefully healthy) snacks parents packed for their kids. She seemed almost evangelistic about it, but I’m thinking she was as frustrated as I often am: why can’t we find a middle ground between the occasional, well-deserved and happily enjoyed birthday cupcake on the one hand, and total sugar-salt-and-fat-fueled gluttony on the other? Why can some class moms keep the party more focused on a holiday themed activity, with the treat as a side-show; while others can’t resist the candy aisle?
Before the ban, when my older son was in first grade, a Thanksgiving celebration involved making butter by shaking containers of cream and salt. But was that, and the corn muffins on which to spread the homemade, just-like-the-Pilgrims-did-it butter enough? Hell to the no: the class parents also provided a party spread that included — and I am not making this up — everything from cheese doodles and potato chips to Twizzlers and M&Ms. Row by row, the class lined up to fill a paper plate with their chosen goodies. Guess what?! Nearly all of them completely over-indulged in this uniquely American mixture of salty, crunchy, sweet, fatty fare. One of the class moms actually said to me, “Look at all the stuff they’re piling on their plates!”, as though it was some sort of wild surprise that when 6- and 7-year-old kids are presented with a buffet of snack and treat options, they’ll take a little too much of just about everything. Did she somehow think that they’d be discerning, or say things like, “Hmmm, Twizzlers and cheese doodles might leave my tummy a bit upset”, or “better just take one or two things; we’re headed to lunch in 10 minutes anyway!”
Of course they wouldn’t. Duh. You give kids an unlimited buffet of crap, it’s crap they’ll reach for.
But when my younger boy hit first grade, Year One (and, as it turned out, Year Only) of the ban, birthdays involved parents coming in to read — no cupcakes, no goody bags, no treats. And holidays involved a craft or other activities.
They felt the difference, and while having their parents in the room reading a book or helping with a craft was nice, they noticed the lack of celebratory goodies, and they didn’t like it.
Are you surprised to find that neither did I?
I don’t think kids should be handed donuts, cookies, candy, and chips every time they turn around, which is standard operating procedure these days. No one can go to a club meeting, a sport, or a playdate without treats. Even in our religious ed classes, catechists had to be told by the director that they should try their best to refrain from offering snacks during classes. The net effect, though, is that what I’d call legitimate treat times — birthdays, holidays — become less special. I say, get rid of the lollipops or M&Ms or Twizzlers as “prizes” for good spelling or good behavior; get rid of tables groaning with an overabundance of crap at parties; disassociate Girl Scouts and religious ed classes and soccer games from “chance to have a donut.”
Do that, and you can safely leave in place a cupcake on a birthday, or chocolates on Valentine’s Day, or freshly-buttered corn muffins on Thanksgiving.
Now that our principal has bowed to pressure and re-instated food “privileges” in classrooms, we’ll see how things go. Next up is Halloween. The school holds an adorable parade of the costumed classes, and often the teachers and class parents have parties afterward back in the classroom. Can we all reign it in? I’ll let you know in a few weeks…
And Patricia: Continue to fight the good fight!
Christina Baglivi Tinglof
October 4, 2011 @ 1:30 pm
I’ve always said that from October 31 through Easter is “The Season of Candy.” It’s never ending! I can’t control (much) of what happens in the classroom in regard to sweets but I sure can control what happens in my home. And I try to take the middle road–sweets after dinner on ocassion and definitely when we have a party.
P.S. I work in a school part time where they hand out coupons for “good behavior” which the kids can save up and then “buy” a treat. I hate it and refuse to give them out. I believe we shouldn’t reward children for doing things they should already be doing!
Denise
October 4, 2011 @ 2:01 pm
Thanks, Christina. My second-grader came home from his first day at school totally jazzed by the “ticket” system his teacher has. Earn this many tickets and you get this prize, etc. It’s not food, but still — I don’t like the idea — even though it’s pervasive in schools from pre-K on — of attaching a reward for every little “good” thing. I probably sound like the biggest broken record in the world to him, but every time he says he earned another ticket, I tell him, “I’m glad you were nice to Thea and Mrs. T gave you a ticket, but you should be nice to your classmates anyway, right?” Sigh!
Denise
Dawn
October 7, 2011 @ 2:15 pm
Candy in school? Why would any teacher subject themselves to 20 kids on a sugar high? Neither of my kids’ schools even allows candy, period. Ditto for anything with peanuts. They encourage low-sugar, healthy snacks which the parents take turns providing for the class. These tend to include pretzels, fresh fruit, cheese & crackers, home-made muffins (no frosting), cereal, etc. Cupcakes (with frosting) are allowed for birthdays, and given out at the very end of the day. Both schools do use access to computer time or “free choice” activities as incentives for kids to finish their work, but I don’t see any problem with that. The rewards encourage good study habits – things the kids will hopefully just do on their own later because it becomes habitual.
Elise
October 9, 2011 @ 8:24 am
As a parent of older kids (19,17 and 14) I can remember those days…I would like to make the point to be careful not to make it a super big issue and control what they eat too much. I tried to have some rules regarding treats but I was pretty laid back about it. I did notice that there were kids that would visit my house that had more controlling parents and they would head to our treats and eat them like there was no tomorrow! I didn’t want to spend my time trying to control other people’s kids. Also, my sons best friend that went off to college drinks excessive amounts of soda because his parents NEVER had it in the house. When my kids were very small the common advice by some experts (Dr. Brazelton and Dr. Penelope Leach) was to provide them with access to both good and bad and they would eventually eat the right amounts of each…I feel that with my kids this was true. They do enjoy sweets but they also love fruits AND vegetables. Some people would say that they eat too many sweets but when I sit back and observe them compared to other kids they tend to eat less. My son at college is trying to eat well so that he feels better…while his friend is often hyped up on two liters of Pepsi. Sooo, just saying:)
Jennifer Hull
October 10, 2011 @ 7:13 pm
Great post. The candy thing drives me nuts too, especially when teachers use candy to reward good behavior.
I fought a losing battle on this front until I recruited an ally: a mom who was a dentist! When she took up the cause, we made progress.
So, dear mom and dad dentists out there, please help. Your words carry weight! It’s hard for a teacher or administrator to ignore a professional who is warning about cavities.
Tawn
October 20, 2011 @ 1:44 pm
This is subject probably my favorite soap box, as i’m a mother of young children and a nutritionist specializing in children’s nutrition. I am so frustrated by the absolute candy/junk food train at everything, but equally as frustrated without out-right bans and “healthy only” snack regimes that outlaw perfectly culturally legitimate high fat/treat foods (perfect example being the class made butter on cornbread or birthday cupcakes.)
Our job as the adults in children’s lives is to set regular meals and snacks, and show children when it’s appropriate to have “treat” foods, and how to enjoy them.
Denise
October 20, 2011 @ 1:47 pm
Tawn,
thanks for the comment — and YES, that is exactly my point! Health-conscious administrators like our principal found she had to enforce an outright ban because calls to keep the deluge in check were going unheeded. There IS a middle ground. I spend a lot of time explaining to my kids the difference between treats and meals, and appropriate times for treats, and so on. I feel like a broken record, but then again, parenting is nothing if not repetitive, yes? I hope you keep reading, and thanks again for weighing in.
Denise
Melissa
October 25, 2011 @ 4:32 pm
Great blog post! I was just ranting about this to my husband last week. I also try to take the middle road– healthy sweets after dinner on ocassion and definitely when we have a party. My son is 3 1/2 and in preschool and his teacher uses candy as a reward! Every day he comes home saying “Oh, I had a chocolate cookie today (oreo)” or “I had some candy today.” I’ve discussed with the teacher and the administrator of the preschool – I’ve suggested stickers and even purchased them myself and brought them in, to no avail. I’ve explained how this sets up an unhealthy relationship with food, how it’s not good for their teeth, etc. The teacher says she doesn’t give them much sugar, she dodges my questions, and does what she wants. Boy o boy is this frustrating. At least my son loves heatlhy food and vegetables, and we eat this at home, but I simply do not understand how this teacher (who is overweight) can justify giving kids all this candy! UGH!