Dear Murdock Families, You are invited to help your child participate in our school wide health challenge! Studies have shown that there is a strong relationship between sugar consumption and obesity. In order to promote healthy eating awareness, Murdock is having a contest based on the snacks that the children bring to eat each day. Your child will write on a class recording sheet their snack name and the number of sugar grams the snack has. In order to help your child, if the snack they are bringing is not prepackaged with a nutritional label, please write the amount of sugar that the snack contains either on the container or baggy or on a slip of paper. The contest will last for two weeks. The first week, beginning Tuesday, January 17th, is a trial week to give children and their families an opportunity to learn and discuss healthy snack choices. The second week is the week that counts! Each day classes will report the average amount of sugar consumed for class snacks. The classes that keep their sugar values within the healthy snack range will receive an extra outdoor recess time. The teachers of the top 3 classes that keep their sugar values the lowest will receive a monetary reward to use in their classrooms!
“"0”"
during the contest?
We appreciate your support with helping our future leaders be healthy leaders!
More about Food Groups: SWEETS
What is Sugar?
How Sugar Affects our Body Sugar Addiction: Degenerative Diseases: Decreased Immune System: Decreased Ability to Learn: Energy high and lows: Mood Swings: Empty Calories: Identifying Sugar in Foods Food labels list sugar quantities in grams: 4 grams of sugar = 1 tsp. It is very important to pay attention to the serving size when analyzing sugar content of foods Sweet Snacks with NO added sugar Dried Fruits Fresh Fruits Berries Unsweetened Apple Sauce
Sweet Potatoes Red Peppers Carrots Beets
This is the common term used to describe the sweet carbohydrate (sucrose) found in every fruit and vegetable. In our body, sucrose is then broken down into two simple carbohydrates called glucose and fructose. Glucose is the major source of energy for the muscles and nervous tissue of the body. We can produce all the glucose the brain needs by digesting whole natural unprocessed foods.
Natural sugars
found in fruits and whole grains, are accompanied by vitamins, minerals, enzymes and fiber. These foods break down slowly into small units of glucose that enter the bloodstream through the small intestine where they are burned gradually as the body requires energy.Refined sugars
have been stripped of all the vitamins, minerals, enzymes and fiber that's needed for proper digestion. This glucose, not accompanied by nutrients, gets directly digested. However, not realizing that this glucose has already been digested, our pancreas secretes insulin to metabolize the glucose. This results in an immediate energy boost, which is then followed by a drop in energy and fatigue. By over-consuming sucrose, you eventually lose the ability to metabolize sugar and keep it in a healthy range within the cells. A normal blood sugar and normal glucose tolerance test, simply means that your pancreas is still healthy enough to shunt a large load of sugar to inside cells. It is within the cells themselves where the sugar does its damage. Dr. John Yudkin of Queens College states that, "All human nutritional needs can be met in full without having to take a single spoonful of white, brown or raw sugar."
Standard: Consuming more water, fruits, vegetables grains and calcium-rich foods