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There was a time when schools had a very clear job. Teach subjects, conduct exams, send report cards, finish syllabus. Everything else was considered the parents’ department.Now schools are ought to do everything. Teach values, teach discipline, teach communication skills, teach confidence, teach emotional intelligence, teach digital safety, teach social behaviour, teach life skills, and now, increasingly, schools are also expected to monitor what children are bringing in their lunchboxes.
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If you had said this 20 years ago, people would have laughed. “Why should school care what my child eats?” But today, many schools send circulars about healthy food, no junk food days, fruit days, balanced lunch, and parents have very strong opinions about this. Some are thankful. Some are annoyed. Some feel schools are interfering too much.But if you talk to teachers, they’ll explain this very simply.They are not trying to control lunchboxes.They are trying to control what happens after lunch break.Teachers often say the post-lunch class tells them everything. Who ate properly, who didn’t eat, who ate too much junk, who is sleepy, who is hyper, who is irritated, who cannot sit still. By afternoon, food has already become behaviour.So even though food comes from home, its effects are visible in school. That’s why schools slowly started getting involved.
This is actually part of a bigger change. Schools are no longer just academic buildings. They are places where children spend most of their day growing up. They learn how to sit, talk, share, compete, lose, win, fight, apologise, make friends, handle pressure, and basically learn how to function in society.So naturally, schools have started thinking beyond textbooks.But this also creates a strange situation where parents sometimes feel schools are doing too much, and schools sometimes feel parents expect them to do everything.The truth is, children don’t live in two separate worlds called school and home. For them, it’s one continuous day. If school says one thing and home says another, children just get confused or choose the easier option.Habits like food, sleep, screen time, behaviour, reading, exercise, all of these cannot be built by only school or only parents. They are built by daily life, and daily life is shared between home and school.So maybe the question is not “Should schools control what children eat?”That question immediately makes everyone defensive.Maybe the real question is simple:If food affects how children behave, concentrate, and learn in class, can schools really pretend food has nothing to do with education?Because education is not only what happens in the textbook.Education is also what happens after lunch break.

