WEBVTT 00:00:00.772 --> 00:00:02.312 I am a chef 00:00:02.336 --> 00:00:03.677 and a food policy guy, 00:00:04.779 --> 00:00:08.072 but I come from a whole family of teachers. 00:00:08.096 --> 00:00:11.391 My sister is a special ed teacher in Chicago. 00:00:11.415 --> 00:00:15.662 My father just retired after 25 years teaching fifth grade. 00:00:16.177 --> 00:00:18.322 My aunt and uncle were professors. 00:00:18.346 --> 00:00:19.998 My cousins all teach. 00:00:20.022 --> 00:00:23.604 Everybody in my family, basically, teaches except for me. 00:00:24.778 --> 00:00:29.622 They taught me that the only way to get the right answers 00:00:29.646 --> 00:00:32.191 is to ask the right questions. 00:00:33.051 --> 00:00:34.634 So what are the right questions 00:00:34.658 --> 00:00:38.817 when it comes to improving the educational outcomes for our children? 00:00:40.806 --> 00:00:43.628 There's obviously many important questions, 00:00:43.652 --> 00:00:46.124 but I think the following is a good place to start: 00:00:47.046 --> 00:00:49.090 What do we think the connection is 00:00:49.114 --> 00:00:52.533 between a child's growing mind 00:00:52.557 --> 00:00:53.949 and their growing body? 00:00:54.870 --> 00:00:57.608 What can we expect our kids to learn 00:00:57.632 --> 00:01:01.641 if their diets are full of sugar and empty of nutrients? 00:01:02.617 --> 00:01:04.798 What can they possibly learn 00:01:04.822 --> 00:01:09.284 if their bodies are literally going hungry? 00:01:10.157 --> 00:01:13.964 And with all the resources that we are pouring into schools, 00:01:13.988 --> 00:01:16.140 we should stop and ask ourselves: 00:01:16.164 --> 00:01:19.110 Are we really setting our kids up for success? NOTE Paragraph 00:01:20.119 --> 00:01:21.824 Now, a few years ago, 00:01:21.848 --> 00:01:26.002 I was a judge on a cooking competition called "Chopped." 00:01:26.598 --> 00:01:29.578 Four chefs compete with mystery ingredients 00:01:29.602 --> 00:01:32.246 to see who can cook the best dishes. 00:01:33.008 --> 00:01:36.648 Except for this episode -- it was a very special one. 00:01:37.402 --> 00:01:40.834 Instead of four overzealous chefs trying to break into the limelight -- 00:01:40.858 --> 00:01:42.925 something that I would know nothing about -- 00:01:42.949 --> 00:01:43.990 (Laughter) 00:01:44.014 --> 00:01:46.673 these chefs were school chefs; 00:01:46.697 --> 00:01:49.846 you know, the women that you used to call "lunch ladies," 00:01:49.870 --> 00:01:52.834 but the ones I insist we call "school chefs." 00:01:53.303 --> 00:01:56.283 Now, these women -- God bless these women -- 00:01:56.307 --> 00:02:00.240 spend their day cooking for thousands of kids, 00:02:00.264 --> 00:02:04.032 breakfast and lunch, with only $2.68 per lunch, 00:02:04.056 --> 00:02:07.194 with only about a dollar of that actually going to the food. 00:02:08.226 --> 00:02:10.083 In this episode, 00:02:10.130 --> 00:02:12.733 the main-course mystery ingredient was quinoa. 00:02:13.400 --> 00:02:15.061 Now, I know it's been a long time 00:02:15.085 --> 00:02:17.281 since most of you have had a school lunch, 00:02:17.305 --> 00:02:19.917 and we've made a lot of progress on nutrition, 00:02:19.941 --> 00:02:23.075 but quinoa still is not a staple in most school cafeterias. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:23.099 --> 00:02:24.942 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:02:24.966 --> 00:02:26.332 So this was a challenge. 00:02:26.957 --> 00:02:30.174 But the dish that I will never forget was cooked by a woman 00:02:30.198 --> 00:02:31.855 named Cheryl Barbara. 00:02:31.879 --> 00:02:33.613 Cheryl was the nutrition director 00:02:33.637 --> 00:02:36.001 at High School in the Community in Connecticut. 00:02:36.025 --> 00:02:38.182 She cooked this delicious pasta. 00:02:38.206 --> 00:02:39.432 It was amazing. 00:02:39.456 --> 00:02:42.099 It was a pappardelle with Italian sausage, 00:02:42.123 --> 00:02:43.895 kale, Parmesan cheese. 00:02:43.919 --> 00:02:47.178 It was delicious, like, restaurant-quality good, except -- 00:02:47.202 --> 00:02:50.962 she basically just threw the quinoa, pretty much uncooked, 00:02:50.986 --> 00:02:52.164 into the dish. 00:02:52.553 --> 00:02:54.273 It was a strange choice, 00:02:54.297 --> 00:02:56.770 and it was super crunchy. 00:02:56.794 --> 00:02:59.436 (Laughter) 00:02:59.460 --> 00:03:04.378 So I took on the TV accusatory judge thing that you're supposed to do, 00:03:04.402 --> 00:03:06.240 and I asked her why she did that. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:06.794 --> 00:03:10.113 Cheryl responded, "Well, first, I don't know what quinoa is." 00:03:10.137 --> 00:03:11.197 (Laughter) 00:03:11.221 --> 00:03:15.237 "But I do know that it's a Monday, 00:03:15.261 --> 00:03:18.618 and that in my school, at High School in the Community, 00:03:18.642 --> 00:03:20.534 I always cook pasta." NOTE Paragraph 00:03:21.116 --> 00:03:23.758 See, Cheryl explained that for many of her kids, 00:03:24.574 --> 00:03:26.812 there were no meals on the weekends. 00:03:28.728 --> 00:03:30.438 No meals on Saturday. 00:03:32.343 --> 00:03:33.993 No meals on Sunday, either. 00:03:35.047 --> 00:03:38.513 So she cooked pasta because she wanted to make sure 00:03:38.537 --> 00:03:43.275 she cooked something she knew her children would eat. 00:03:44.760 --> 00:03:47.454 Something that would stick to their ribs, she said. 00:03:48.882 --> 00:03:51.138 Something that would fill them up. 00:03:52.972 --> 00:03:56.797 Cheryl talked about how, by the time Monday came, 00:03:57.967 --> 00:04:00.568 her kids' hunger pangs were so intense 00:04:00.592 --> 00:04:03.345 that they couldn't even begin to think about learning. 00:04:04.356 --> 00:04:07.977 Food was the only thing on their mind. 00:04:10.714 --> 00:04:11.884 The only thing. 00:04:12.296 --> 00:04:15.463 And unfortunately, the stats -- they tell the same story. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:16.071 --> 00:04:18.752 So, let's put this into the context of a child. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:20.633 --> 00:04:21.939 And we're going to focus on 00:04:21.963 --> 00:04:24.207 the most important meal of the day, breakfast. 00:04:24.231 --> 00:04:25.542 Meet Allison. 00:04:25.566 --> 00:04:27.070 She's 12 years old, 00:04:27.094 --> 00:04:28.750 she's smart as a whip 00:04:28.774 --> 00:04:31.537 and she wants to be a physicist when she grows up. 00:04:31.561 --> 00:04:35.570 If Allison goes to a school that serves a nutritious breakfast 00:04:35.594 --> 00:04:36.840 to all of their kids, 00:04:36.864 --> 00:04:38.414 here's what's going to follow. 00:04:38.946 --> 00:04:42.211 Her chances of getting a nutritious meal, 00:04:42.235 --> 00:04:45.401 one with fruit and milk, one lower in sugar and salt, 00:04:45.425 --> 00:04:47.011 dramatically increase. 00:04:47.637 --> 00:04:51.320 Allison will have a lower rate of obesity than the average kid. 00:04:51.344 --> 00:04:53.129 She'll have to visit the nurse less. 00:04:53.153 --> 00:04:56.172 She'll have lower levels of anxiety and depression. 00:04:56.196 --> 00:04:57.712 She'll have better behavior. 00:04:57.736 --> 00:05:00.991 She'll have better attendance, and she'll show up on time more often. 00:05:01.015 --> 00:05:02.387 Why? 00:05:02.411 --> 00:05:05.411 Well, because there's a good meal waiting for her at school. 00:05:06.007 --> 00:05:08.834 Overall, Allison is in much better health 00:05:09.461 --> 00:05:10.942 than the average school kid. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:11.887 --> 00:05:13.520 So what about that kid 00:05:13.544 --> 00:05:16.531 who doesn't have a nutritious breakfast waiting for him? 00:05:16.555 --> 00:05:17.963 Well, meet Tommy. 00:05:18.546 --> 00:05:20.974 He's also 12. He's a wonderful kid. 00:05:20.998 --> 00:05:22.478 He wants to be a doctor. 00:05:22.785 --> 00:05:24.549 By the time Tommy is in kindergarten, 00:05:24.573 --> 00:05:27.402 he's already underperforming in math. 00:05:28.174 --> 00:05:30.354 By the time he's in third grade, 00:05:30.378 --> 00:05:32.975 he's got lower math and reading scores. 00:05:34.158 --> 00:05:35.951 By the time he's 11, 00:05:35.975 --> 00:05:39.806 it's more likely that Tommy will have to have repeated a grade. 00:05:41.092 --> 00:05:44.189 Research shows that kids who do not have consistent nourishment, 00:05:44.213 --> 00:05:45.468 particularly at breakfast, 00:05:45.492 --> 00:05:48.773 have poor cognitive function overall. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:50.750 --> 00:05:52.884 So how widespread is this problem? 00:05:53.676 --> 00:05:55.871 Well, unfortunately, it's pervasive. 00:05:57.228 --> 00:05:58.453 Let me give you two stats 00:05:58.477 --> 00:06:01.441 that seem like they're on opposite ends of the issue, 00:06:01.465 --> 00:06:03.613 but are actually two sides of the same coin. 00:06:04.140 --> 00:06:06.154 On the one hand, 00:06:06.178 --> 00:06:09.386 one in six Americans are food insecure, 00:06:09.410 --> 00:06:12.651 including 16 million children -- almost 20 percent -- 00:06:13.394 --> 00:06:14.784 are food insecure. 00:06:14.808 --> 00:06:16.895 In this city alone, in New York City, 00:06:18.173 --> 00:06:23.477 474,000 kids under the age of 18 face hunger every year. 00:06:24.884 --> 00:06:26.059 It's crazy. 00:06:26.480 --> 00:06:27.630 On the other hand, 00:06:28.503 --> 00:06:32.612 diet and nutrition is the number one cause of preventable death and disease 00:06:32.636 --> 00:06:34.339 in this country, by far. 00:06:35.271 --> 00:06:38.492 And fully a third of the kids that we've been talking about tonight 00:06:38.516 --> 00:06:41.290 are on track to have diabetes in their lifetime. 00:06:42.807 --> 00:06:45.189 Now, what's hard to put together but is true 00:06:45.213 --> 00:06:47.756 is that, many times, these are the same children. 00:06:48.855 --> 00:06:51.754 So they fill up on the unhealthy and cheap calories 00:06:51.778 --> 00:06:55.968 that surround them in their communities and that their families can afford. 00:06:56.752 --> 00:06:58.709 But then by the end of the month, 00:06:59.757 --> 00:07:03.322 food stamps run out or hours get cut at work, 00:07:03.346 --> 00:07:06.423 and they don't have the money to cover the basic cost of food. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:08.089 --> 00:07:11.415 But we should be able to solve this problem, right? 00:07:11.439 --> 00:07:13.107 We know what the answers are. 00:07:13.917 --> 00:07:18.048 As part of my work at the White House, we instituted a program 00:07:18.072 --> 00:07:21.566 that for all schools that had 40 percent more low-income kids, 00:07:21.590 --> 00:07:25.514 we could serve breakfast and lunch to every kid in that school. 00:07:26.272 --> 00:07:27.431 For free. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:28.305 --> 00:07:30.356 This program has been incredibly successful, 00:07:30.380 --> 00:07:34.432 because it helped us overcome a very difficult barrier 00:07:34.456 --> 00:07:37.601 when it came to getting kids a nutritious breakfast. 00:07:37.625 --> 00:07:40.342 And that was the barrier of stigma. 00:07:41.769 --> 00:07:46.026 See, schools serve breakfast before school, 00:07:47.778 --> 00:07:51.826 and it was only available for the poor kids. 00:07:53.371 --> 00:07:56.700 So everybody knew who was poor and who needed government help. 00:07:57.597 --> 00:08:02.397 Now, all kids, no matter how much or how little their parents make, 00:08:02.421 --> 00:08:03.781 have a lot of pride. 00:08:05.107 --> 00:08:06.384 So what happened? 00:08:06.977 --> 00:08:09.445 Well, the schools that have implemented this program 00:08:09.469 --> 00:08:14.168 saw an increase in math and reading scores by 17.5 percent. 00:08:14.657 --> 00:08:16.572 17.5 percent. 00:08:17.490 --> 00:08:21.929 And research shows that when kids have a consistent, nutritious breakfast, 00:08:23.882 --> 00:08:27.544 their chances of graduating increase by 20 percent. 00:08:28.313 --> 00:08:29.904 20 percent. 00:08:31.012 --> 00:08:34.771 When we give our kids the nourishment they need, 00:08:34.795 --> 00:08:36.881 we give them the chance to thrive, 00:08:37.955 --> 00:08:40.036 both in the classroom and beyond. NOTE Paragraph 00:08:40.900 --> 00:08:43.866 Now, you don't have to trust me on this, 00:08:44.644 --> 00:08:46.599 but you should talk to Donna Martin. 00:08:47.249 --> 00:08:48.996 I love Donna Martin. 00:08:49.020 --> 00:08:52.697 Donna Martin is the school nutrition director at Burke County 00:08:52.721 --> 00:08:54.403 in Waynesboro, Georgia. 00:08:55.053 --> 00:08:57.766 Burke County is one of the poorest districts 00:08:57.790 --> 00:09:00.493 in the fifth-poorest state in the country, 00:09:00.517 --> 00:09:06.646 and about 100 percent of Donna's students live at or below the poverty line. 00:09:07.672 --> 00:09:08.883 A few years ago, 00:09:08.907 --> 00:09:12.861 Donna decided to get out ahead of the new standards that were coming, 00:09:12.885 --> 00:09:15.171 and overhaul her nutrition standards. 00:09:16.200 --> 00:09:20.851 She improved and added fruit and vegetables and whole grains. 00:09:20.875 --> 00:09:23.820 She served breakfast in the classroom to all of her kids. 00:09:24.374 --> 00:09:26.198 And she implemented a dinner program. 00:09:26.222 --> 00:09:27.379 Why? 00:09:28.336 --> 00:09:31.430 Well, many of her kids didn't have dinner when they went home. NOTE Paragraph 00:09:31.975 --> 00:09:34.184 So how did they respond? 00:09:34.208 --> 00:09:36.829 Well, the kids loved the food. 00:09:37.577 --> 00:09:39.265 They loved the better nutrition, 00:09:39.289 --> 00:09:41.262 and they loved not being hungry. 00:09:42.759 --> 00:09:46.416 But Donna's biggest supporter came from an unexpected place. 00:09:47.055 --> 00:09:49.139 His name from Eric Parker, 00:09:49.163 --> 00:09:52.797 and he was the head football coach for the Burke County Bears. 00:09:53.668 --> 00:09:56.733 Now, Coach Parker had coached mediocre teams for years. 00:09:56.757 --> 00:09:59.680 The Bears often ended in the middle of the pack -- 00:09:59.704 --> 00:10:02.866 a big disappointment in one of the most passionate football states 00:10:02.890 --> 00:10:04.058 in the Union. 00:10:04.542 --> 00:10:09.150 But the year Donna changed the menus, 00:10:09.174 --> 00:10:12.681 the Bears not only won their division, 00:10:12.705 --> 00:10:15.144 they went on to win the state championship, 00:10:15.168 --> 00:10:17.534 beating the Peach County Trojans 00:10:17.558 --> 00:10:18.880 28-14. NOTE Paragraph 00:10:18.904 --> 00:10:21.259 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:10:21.283 --> 00:10:22.797 And Coach Parker, 00:10:23.507 --> 00:10:26.788 he credited that championship to Donna Martin. NOTE Paragraph 00:10:29.274 --> 00:10:32.035 When we give our kids the basic nourishment, 00:10:32.059 --> 00:10:33.464 they're going to thrive. 00:10:34.310 --> 00:10:37.350 And it's not just up to the Cheryl Barbaras 00:10:37.374 --> 00:10:39.229 and the Donna Martins of the world. 00:10:40.039 --> 00:10:41.395 It's on all of us. 00:10:42.218 --> 00:10:46.704 And feeding our kids the basic nutrition is just the starting point. 00:10:47.517 --> 00:10:49.482 What I've laid out is really a model 00:10:49.506 --> 00:10:52.581 for so many of the most pressing issues that we face. 00:10:54.183 --> 00:10:59.403 If we focus on the simple goal of properly nourishing ourselves, 00:11:00.514 --> 00:11:03.675 we could see a world that is more stable and secure; 00:11:04.929 --> 00:11:08.097 we could dramatically improve our economic productivity; 00:11:09.023 --> 00:11:11.574 we could transform our health care 00:11:12.736 --> 00:11:14.412 and we could go a long way 00:11:14.436 --> 00:11:17.482 in ensuring that the Earth can provide for generations to come. 00:11:17.506 --> 00:11:22.174 Food is that place where our collective efforts 00:11:22.198 --> 00:11:24.071 can have the greatest impact. NOTE Paragraph 00:11:25.825 --> 00:11:28.910 So we have to ask ourselves: What is the right question? 00:11:28.934 --> 00:11:30.462 What would happen 00:11:30.486 --> 00:11:36.011 if we fed ourselves more nutritious, more sustainably grown food? 00:11:36.702 --> 00:11:38.066 What would be the impact? 00:11:39.184 --> 00:11:40.599 Cheryl Barbara, 00:11:41.909 --> 00:11:43.531 Donna Martin, 00:11:43.555 --> 00:11:45.714 Coach Parker and the Burke County Bears -- 00:11:46.539 --> 00:11:48.183 I think they know the answer. NOTE Paragraph 00:11:48.207 --> 00:11:49.818 Thank you guys so very much. NOTE Paragraph 00:11:49.842 --> 00:11:54.314 (Applause)