Shop the Super Crew Store Visit Our BlogRSS FeedJoin on FacebookFollow on Twitter Shop the Super Crew Kids Store
Superkids Nutrition Resources
 


Loading
Parent Role Modeling

     back to Parent Role Modeling


Using Candy as a Reward Leaves a Very Bad Taste
By: Joanne Ikeda, MA RD

I recently received a copy of a letter sent home to parents by the
principal of an elementary school. In the letter, the principal stated that
the teachers at his school try to maintain a positive environment by
rewarding good behavior, sometimes with candy. According to him, "These
treats cost the teachers very little and they get a great return on their
investment." However, parents who do not want their child to be rewarded
with candy should notify the teacher so that an alternative reward can be
offered.
         
What is happening here? The principal and the teachers have not made the link between what they are doing in their school and what is happening in
the larger world. In the early 1970s, 5% of children were overweight, now
15% are overweight. In the early 1970s, type 2 diabetes was referred to as
"adult onset diabetes." Now pediatricians are reporting that children as
young as 6 are being diagnosed with this condition. We may be raising the
first generation of children born after WW II whose lifespan may decrease
due to a lifestyle that puts them at very high risk of chronic disease. For
example:

  • Four out of five children are not eating the minimum recommended number of servings of fruits and vegetables. Instead, they are consuming foods of low nutrient density such as candy, cookies, chips, doughnuts and French fries.
  • There has been a dramatic increase in soft drink intake in children over the past 20 years while the rate of milk intake has decreased. Eighty-one percent of teenage girls are not getting enough calcium in their diet because they drink more soda than milk.
  • Children spend an average of four hours a day watching TV, and another half-hour playing computer games.
  • Less than half of children are physically active for an hour every day; 80% of youngsters enrolled in middle schools could not pass the California fitness program.

What does this have to do with giving children candy as rewards for good behavior? More than one would think. We are born with an innate preference for sweet taste. This preference can be fostered or suppressed. If it is fostered, children will be resistant to eating foods that don't taste sweet, like vegetables, plain milk and unsweetened cereal.

Research on child eating habits has shown that foods used as "rewards" become more desirable to children than if they had not been used as rewards. So, when candy is used as a reward, children come to like it more and want it more than they would otherwise.

What about the children whose parents don't want them given candy as a reward? What will happen to them as they watch other children receive candy while they are given something else? Candy will become the "forbidden fruit." It will become even more desirable to these children because they can't have it. Studies also have shown when restricted food does become freely available, the child will eat more of it than she would have if it hadn't been restricted.

How fair is all this to those parents who are taking the responsibility to see that their children have healthy lifestyles?

Giving children candy as a reward is like saying, "Here is something that is not very healthy for you as a reward for being good." Does this make sense?

If I were a parent whose child attended this school, I would give the principal all this information. If he continued to allow teachers to use candy as a reward, I would notify the superintendent of schools and the board of education.

This is not overreacting. We cannot risk the health of our children because of ignorance or obstinacy. What appears to be an inexpensive solution to problematic behavior by this principal and his teachers, will costs us millions of dollars in the long term.

Joanne P. Ikeda, MA,RD is a nationally recognized expert on pediatric obesity and the dietary practices of ethnic and immigrant populations. She is currently Nutritionist Emeritus of the Department of Nutritional Sciences and founding Co-Director, Center for Weight and Health University of California, Berkeley. Ikeda serves as one of the Super Kids Nutrition Editorial Experts.







Answers to all your Nutrition questions. Super Crew Kids Site Super Foods Nutrition Experts Our Book of the Month Nutrition Answers Shop for Nutrition Knowledge

Nutrition Books for Kids

Nutrition Books for Kids

| MORE  
Home