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Want to teach kids well? Feed them well

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    I am a chef
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    and a food policy guy,
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    but I come from a whole
    family of teachers.
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    My sister is a special ed
    teacher in Chicago.
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    My father just retired
    after 25 years teaching fifth grade.
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    My aunt and uncle were professors.
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    My cousins all teach.
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    Everybody in my family, basically,
    teaches except for me.
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    They taught me that the only way
    to get the right answers
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    is to ask the right questions.
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    So what are the right questions
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    when it comes to improving
    the educational outcomes for our children?
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    There's obviously
    many important questions,
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    but I think the following
    is a good place to start:
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    What do we think the connection is
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    between a child's growing mind
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    and their growing body?
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    What can we expect our kids to learn
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    if their diets are full of sugar
    and empty of nutrients?
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    What can they possibly learn
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    if their bodies
    are literally going hungry?
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    And with all the resources
    that we are pouring into schools,
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    we should stop and ask ourselves:
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    Are we really setting our kids
    up for success?
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    Now, a few years ago,
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    I was a judge on a cooking
    competition called "Chopped."
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    Its four chefs compete
    with mystery ingredients
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    to see who can cook the best dishes.
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    Except for this episode --
    it was a very special one.
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    Instead of four overzealous chefs
    trying to break into the limelight --
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    something that I would know
    nothing about --
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    (Laughter)
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    These chefs were school chefs --
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    you know, the women that you used
    to call "lunch ladies,"
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    but the ones I insist
    we call "school chefs."
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    Now, these women -- God bless
    these women --
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    spend their day cooking
    for thousands of kids,
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    breakfast and lunch,
    with only $2.68 per lunch,
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    with only about a dollar of that
    actually going to the food.
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    Now, in this episode,
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    the main course mystery
    ingredient was quinoa.
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    Now, I know it's been a long time
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    since most of you have had a school lunch,
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    and we've made a lot
    of progress on nutrition,
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    but quinoa still is not a staple
    in most school cafeterias.
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    (Laughter)
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    So this was a challenge.
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    But the dish that I will never forget
    was cooked by a woman
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    named Cheryl Barbara.
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    Cheryl was the nutrition director
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    at High School in the Community
    in Connecticut.
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    She cooked this delicious pasta.
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    It was amazing.
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    It was a pappardelle with Italian sausage,
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    kale, Parmesan cheese.
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    It was delicious, like,
    restaurant-quality good, except --
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    she basically just threw the quinoa,
    pretty much uncooked,
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    into the dish.
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    It was a strange choice,
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    and it was super crunchy.
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    (Laughter)
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    So I took on the TV accusatory judge thing
    that you're supposed to do,
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    and I asked her why she did that.
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    Cheryl responded, "Well, first,
    I don't know what quinoa is."
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    (Laughter)
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    "But I do know that it's a Monday,
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    and that in my school,
    at High School in the Community,
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    I always cook pasta."
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    See, Cheryl explained
    that for many of her kids,
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    there were no meals on the weekends.
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    No meals on Saturday.
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    No meals on Sunday, either.
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    So she cooked pasta
    because she wanted to make sure
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    she cooked something she knew
    her children would eat.
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    Something that would
    stick to their ribs, she said.
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    Something that would fill them up.
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    By the time Monday came,
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    her kids' hunger pangs were so intense
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    that they couldn't even begin
    to think about learning.
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    Food was the only thing on their mind.
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    The only thing.
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    And unfortunately, the stats --
    they tell the same story.
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    So, let's put this
    into the context of a child.
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    And we're going to focus on
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    the most important meal
    of the day, breakfast.
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    Meet Allison.
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    She's 12 years old,
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    she's smart as a whip
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    and she wants to be a physicist
    when she grows up.
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    If Allison goes to a school
    that serves a nutritious breakfast
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    to all of their kids,
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    here's what's going to follow.
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    Her chances of getting a nutritious meal,
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    one with fruit and milk,
    one lower in sugar and salt,
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    dramatically increase.
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    Allison will have a lower rate
    of obesity than the average kid.
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    She'll have to visit the nurse less.
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    She'll have lower levels
    of anxiety and depression.
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    She'll have better behavior.
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    She'll have better attendance,
    and she'll show up on time more often.
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    Why?
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    Well, because there's a good meal
    waiting for her at school.
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    Overall, Allison is in much better health
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    than the average school kid.
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    So what about that kid
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    who doesn't have a nutritious
    breakfast waiting for him?
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    Well, meet Tommy.
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    He's also 12. He's a wonderful kid.
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    He wants to be a doctor.
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    By the time Tommy is in kindergarten,
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    he's already underperforming in math.
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    By the time he's in third grade,
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    he's got lower math and reading scores.
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    By the time he's 11,
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    it's more likely that Tommy will have
    to have repeated a grade.
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    Research shows that kids
    who do not have consistent nourishment,
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    particularly at breakfast,
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    have poor cognitive function overall.
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    So how widespread is this problem?
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    Well, unfortunately, it's pervasive.
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    Let me give you two stats
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    that seem like they're on opposite
    ends of the issue,
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    but are actually two sides
    of the same coin.
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    On the one hand,
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    one in six Americans are food insecure,
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    including 16 million children --
    almost 20 percent --
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    are food insecure.
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    In this city alone, in New York City,
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    474,000 kids under the age of 18
    face hunger every year.
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    It's crazy.
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    On the other hand,
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    diet and nutrition is the number one cause
    of preventable death and disease
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    in this country, by far.
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    And fully a third of the kids
    that we've been talking about tonight
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    are on track to have diabetes
    in their lifetime.
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    Now, what's hard
    to put together but is true
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    is that, many times,
    these are the same children.
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    So they fill up on the unhealthy
    and cheap calories
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    that surround them in their communities
    and that their families can afford.
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    But then by the end of the month,
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    food stamps run out
    or hours get cut at work,
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    and they don't have the money
    to cover the basic cost of food.
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    But we should be able
    to solve this problem, right?
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    We know what the answers are.
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    As part of my work at the White House,
    we instituted a program
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    that for all schools that had
    40 percent more low-income kids,
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    we could serve breakfast and lunch
    to every kid in that school
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    for free.
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    This program has been
    incredibly successful,
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    because it helped us overcome
    a very difficult barrier
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    when it came to getting kids
    a nutritious breakfast.
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    And that was the barrier of stigma.
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    See, schools serve
    breakfast before school,
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    and it was only available
    for the poor kids.
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    So everybody knew who was poor
    and who needed government help.
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    Now, all kids, no matter how much
    or how little their parents make,
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    have a lot of pride.
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    So what happened?
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    Well, the schools that have
    implemented this program
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    saw an increase in math and reading
    scores by 17.5 percent.
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    17.5 percent.
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    And research shows that when kids
    have a consistent, nutritious breakfast,
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    their chances of graduating
    increase by 20 percent.
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    20 percent.
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    When we give our kids
    the nourishment they need,
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    we give them the chance to thrive,
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    both in the classroom and beyond.
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    Now, you don't have to trust me on this,
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    but you should talk to Donna Martin.
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    I love Donna Martin.
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    Donna Martin is the school nutrition
    director at Burke County
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    in Waynesboro, Georgia.
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    Now, Burke County
    is one of the poorest districts
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    in the fifth-poorest state in the country,
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    and about 100 percent of Donna's students
    live at or below the poverty line.
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    A few years ago,
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    Donna decided to get out ahead
    of the new standards that were coming,
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    and overhaul her nutrition standards.
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    She improved and added
    fruit and vegetables and whole grains.
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    She served breakfast in the classroom
    to all of her kids.
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    And she implemented a dinner program.
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    Why?
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    Well, many of her kids didn't have
    dinner when they went home.
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    So how did they respond?
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    Well, the kids loved the food.
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    They loved the better nutrition,
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    and they loved not being hungry.
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    But Donna's biggest supporter came
    from an unexpected place.
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    His name from Eric Parker,
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    and he was the head football coach
    for the Burke County Bears.
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    Now, coach Parker had coached
    mediocre teams for years.
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    The Bears often ended
    in the middle of the pack --
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    a big disappointment in one
    of the most passionate football states
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    in the union.
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    But the year Donna changed the menus,
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    the Bears not only won their division,
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    they went on to win
    the state championship,
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    beating the Peach County Trojans
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    28-14.
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    (Laughter)
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    And coach Parker,
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    he credited that championship
    to Donna Martin.
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    When we give our kids
    the basic nourishment,
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    they're gonna thrive.
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    And it's not just up
    to the Cheryl Barbaras
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    and the Donna Martins of the world.
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    It's on all of us.
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    And feeding our kids the basic nutrition
    is just the starting point.
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    What I've laid out is really a model
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    for so many of the most pressing
    issues that we face.
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    If we focus on the simple goal
    of properly nourishing ourselves,
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    we could see a world
    that is more stable and secure;
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    we could dramatically improve
    our economic productivity;
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    we could transform our health care
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    and we could go a long way
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    in ensuring that the Earth can provide
    for generations to come.
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    Food is that place
    where our collective efforts
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    can have the greatest impact.
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    So we have to ask ourselves:
    What is the right question?
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    What would happen
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    if we fed ourselves more nutritious,
    more sustainably grown food?
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    What would be the impact?
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    Cheryl Barbara,
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    Donna Martin,
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    Coach Parker and the Burke County Bears --
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    I think they know the answer.
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    Thank you guys so very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Want to teach kids well? Feed them well
Speaker:
Sam Kass
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:02
  • The English transcript was updated on 2/7/2016 to reflect changes in the video.

English subtitles

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