What Children Understand About Food Insecurity
Posted by Civil Eats on April 9, 2018
Researchers have begun asking children about their households’ lack of food—and making surprising discoveries.
Starting midway through my sixth-grade year, off and on for three years, my mother and I were food insecure. This began when my mother left my father, then lost her job, the combination of which plunged us into temporary poverty—defined as less money than what you need to cover the basics, including food.
No one asked me about our diminished circumstances, but I certainly noticed that we’d gone from eating full food-pyramid dinners to eating beans on toast or scrambled eggs on toast or melted cheese on toast. I recognized the shame—my mother’s, which prevented her from talking about our situation; and my own, at being a burden to my parent. When I was alone and responsible for scrounging my own meals, I “helped” by skipping them.
Read more: https://civileats.com/2018/03/26/what-children-understand-about-food-insecurity/
More in "New Resources"
- New Research Article: Understanding implementation determinants of universal school meals through an equity-driven mixed methods approach
- PA Schools Work 2025 School District Fact Sheets
- The 2Gen Investment Case: Making the Most of Capital in All Its Forms
Stay Current in Philly's Higher Education and Nonprofit Sector
We compile a weekly email with local events, resources, national conferences, calls for proposals, grant, volunteer and job opportunities in the higher education and nonprofit sectors.