1998
DOI: 10.1001/archpedi.152.9.899
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The Relationship of School Breakfast to Psychosocial and Academic Functioning

Abstract: To determine if a relationship exists between participation in a school breakfast program and measures of psychosocial and academic functioning in school-aged children.Methods: Information on participation in a school breakfast program, school record data, and in-depth interviews with parents and children were collected in 1 public school in Philadelphia, Pa, and 2 public schools in Baltimore, Md, prior to the implementation of a universally free (UF) breakfast program and again after the program had been in p… Show more

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Cited by 223 publications
(158 citation statements)
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“…OFSTED (2002b) The breakfast club provides one of the few opportunities to convey the school's effective discipline policy in practice to both parents and pupils simultaneously while offering parents the chance to learn from good practice in an informal environment rather than the more formal route of 'Parenting Classes'. Discipline has not been an issue at the breakfast club in the case study school, which supports Murphy et al (1998) findings that there were significantly fewer behavioural and emotional problems associated with the introduction of a free breakfast programme in many schools.…”
Section: Creating a Positive School Culturesupporting
confidence: 78%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…OFSTED (2002b) The breakfast club provides one of the few opportunities to convey the school's effective discipline policy in practice to both parents and pupils simultaneously while offering parents the chance to learn from good practice in an informal environment rather than the more formal route of 'Parenting Classes'. Discipline has not been an issue at the breakfast club in the case study school, which supports Murphy et al (1998) findings that there were significantly fewer behavioural and emotional problems associated with the introduction of a free breakfast programme in many schools.…”
Section: Creating a Positive School Culturesupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Staff at the case study school noticed that levels of concentration dipped during the morning sessions affecting children's work. In an effort to combat this fatigue and improve learning, timetabling of SFA has been rescheduled to the first period supporting Murphy et al (1998) findings. 100% of the staff felt the breakfast club helped improve children's concentration in the morning.…”
Section: Teaching and Learningmentioning
confidence: 74%
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“…Parents and kindergarten teachers play key roles in helping pre-schoolers to develop positive dietary behaviours (11,12) . The existing literature provides educators with excellent tools and examples of nutrition education programmes for children of pre-school age (13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18)(19)(20) . However, few reports have been published on the nutrition education of pre-school children in China, where economic expansion and population increase have occurred rapidly within the last two to three decades.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many different factors affect the ability to learn, to consolidate that learning into memory, and to allow the memory to be retrieved. Thus, for example, stress (de Quervain et al 2000), inattention (Rees et al 1999), and hunger (Murphy et al 1998;Powell et al 1998) may negatively affect our ability to learn, form the memory, and retrieve the memory. But how such factors do so at the neuronal level is not understood (Martin et al 1997).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%