Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Better Breakfast Leads To Higher Grades In Schools

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Mar, 2015 01:09 PM
    Reinforcing the connection between good nutrition and good grades, researchers have found that free school breakfasts help students from low-income families perform better academically.
     
    Policymakers in developing countries can take a cue from the study as it suggests that subsidised breakfast programmes are an effective tool to help elementary school students from low-income families achieve more in school and be better prepared for later life.
     
    "These results suggest that the persistent exposure to the relatively more nutritious breakfast offered through the subsidized breakfast programme throughout elementary school can yield important gains in achievement," said researcher David Frisvold, assistant professor of economics in the Tippie College of Business, University of Iowa.
     
    The researchers found that students who attended schools that participate in the US Department of Agriculture's School Breakfast Program (SBP) had higher scores in math, science, and reading than students in schools that did not participate.
     
    The federal government started the SBP for children from low-income families in 1966. Participation in the programme allows schools to offer subsidised breakfasts if a certain percentage of their overall enrolment comes from families that meet income eligibility guidelines.
     
    Frisvold conducted his study by examining the academic performance of students in schools that are just below the threshold and thus not required to offer free breakfasts and those that are just over it and thus do offer them.
     
    He found the schools that offered free breakfasts showed significantly better academic performance than schools that did not, and that the impact was cumulative.
     
    Math scores were about 25 percent higher at participating schools during a student's elementary school tenure than would be expected otherwise.
     
    Reading and science scores showed similar gains, Frisvold said.
     
    The findings are detailed in the Journal of Public Economics.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Good sleep means less sick leave at work

    Good sleep means less sick leave at work
    If you sleep for seven to eight hours, you are less likely to apply for sick leave at work, finds a fascinating study.

    Good sleep means less sick leave at work

    Why some people bounce back and others give up

    Why some people bounce back and others give up
    How can similar setbacks produce different reactions for two people? It may come down to how much control we feel we have over what happened, according to research.

    Why some people bounce back and others give up

    Why some people lie more than others

    Why some people lie more than others

    Ever wondered why some people lie at the drop of a hat while others sacrifice self-interest to te...

    Why some people lie more than others

    Cannabis could be as addictive as drugs

    Cannabis could be as addictive as drugs
    As more people are able to obtain and consume cannabis legally for medical and, in some states in the US, recreational use, people are less likely...

    Cannabis could be as addictive as drugs

    Beware! A dead snake may also bite

    Beware! A dead snake may also bite
    "A snake's post-mortem movements are fueled by the ions, or electrically charged particles, which remain in the nerve cells of a snake for several hours...

    Beware! A dead snake may also bite

    Man with 'disconnected' brain, alive and kicking at 88!

    Man with 'disconnected' brain, alive and kicking at 88!
    This may sound and read unbelievable but there is an elderly man whose brain has no neural fibre connection between his two hemispheres!

    Man with 'disconnected' brain, alive and kicking at 88!