The Independent

LUNCH COUNTER

The Conservati­ves’ decision to replace free daytime meals with free breakfasts for the youngest school children relies on questionab­le research, says Sophia Komninou

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The Conservati­ve Party’s manifesto pledge to replace free school lunches – for children in the first three years of primary school in England – with free breakfasts is curious to say the least.

Since it was announced, researcher­s have found that the cost of the project is hugely undervalue­d. In an official statement launched before the manifesto, the party said that breakfast clubs “will cost £60m a year”. It has since been found that this would be the equivalent of less than 7p per pupil.

Further analysis by think tank Education Datalab has found that if only half of pupils take up the free breakfast at a more realistic cost of 25p – though even this would only amount to porridge with milk – it could cost more than £400m when extra staffing costs are added in. Before the financial disparity was highlighte­d, questions quickly arose over whether a free school breakfast for all children could be better

than a free school lunch for some.

Reports warned that almost a million children from poor background­s could lose out under the new policy. And it could potentiall­y cost families £440 for each child affected every year. Not all children can, or want to, attend the breakfast clubs, however. Former deputy prime minister Nick Clegg, who was a champion of the policy when it was rolled out in 2014, has warned that “the offer of free breakfasts won’t reach the children who don’t come to breakfast clubs”.

Though the Conservati­ves have issued statements saying that breakfasts are “at least as effective as lunch”, the data that they are relying on is simply not enough.The manifesto pledge is backed by the findings of a pilot study: the Magic Breakfast Project. Year two and year six students in 106 English schools were allocated to receive free breakfast every day during the 2014-2015 academic year in the context of a breakfast club. There was also a control group, for whom breakfast was not provided.

The childrens’ academic achievemen­t was measured by assessing Key Stages one and two assessment­s in maths and English, along with teachers’ feedback on class behaviour and concentrat­ion. The breakfasts were found to be successful in increasing the academic achievemen­t of year two students and helping them to get two months ahead of their peers. Teachers also reported improved behaviour and concentrat­ion.

But there are a few problems here. While the Key Stage assessment­s might provide some unbiased informatio­n, behaviour and concentrat­ion was only assessed by teachers, who were likely to know whether the student attended the breakfast club. With most other literature reporting the positive effects of breakfast on students, this observatio­n could well have been biased.

In a very recent review of the academic research on the impact of dietary intake on school performanc­e, it was found that most studies have looked at the effects of breakfast consumptio­n on academic performanc­e. That doesn’t mean that breakfast aids academic achievemen­t in school-aged children better than lunch. It means that there is more evidence from (mainly cross-sectional) breakfast studies.

Ideally, to compare the two, there would need to be randomised control trials with direct comparison­s between different types of meal and educationa­l outcomes – at present there are none.

Academic achievemen­t is an important criterion, but it shouldn’t be the only one on which we measure the success of a school provision. For many children, their free school lunch may be the only hot meal they have in a day. It may also be the only opportunit­y they have to eat a nutritious meal, including vegetables to support the developmen­t of healthy eating habits, and protein to support physical developmen­t. In short, lunchtime is one more lesson on healthy eating and on what a healthy meal should look like.

Although Theresa May pledged to keep free school lunches for the poorer students, the criteria that will be set are unclear and, considerin­g a lot of poor students were left out before the provision, this is concerning. But regardless of financial background, healthy eating is something every student should learn. This is about educating children to hopefully make healthier choices throughout their lives.

The Magic Breakfast Project makes another very important point that was overlooked in the manifesto: it is not just eating breakfast that delivers improvemen­ts, but attending a breakfast club. It might be the experience of communal eating itself, a time spent with their peers interactin­g in a non-academic environmen­t, that explains the findings. Considerin­g the Conservati­ve Party is quoting only 25 per cent of children attend breakfast clubs at present, a large proportion of students might miss the opportunit­y of the free meal and this experience of communal eating. On the contrary, school lunches are attended by all students, providing an equal opportunit­y to all.

There is not, at present, enough convincing evidence to switch from free school lunches for some children to free breakfasts for all. The financial costs alone are a cause for concern, but the ramificati­ons it could have on teaching children to lead healthy lives are too great to ignore.

Sophia Komninou is a lecturer in infant and child public health at Swansea University. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on (conversati­on.com)

 ??  ?? A free school lunch may be the only hot, nutritious meal some pupils eat in a day (Shuttersto­ck)
A free school lunch may be the only hot, nutritious meal some pupils eat in a day (Shuttersto­ck)

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