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01-01-2001 12:00 AM
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Keep the Government out of my private life!
This is an issue between a physician and parents/patients. It has no place in the public school system.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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discriminate against the fat kids!
So what do you planning on doing with these fat kids?
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Health is a major concern and something needs to be done! Great Idea!
It is such an important issue and concern. I think this is great. We will not be grading on the BMI, but we will let the parents know and understand. Some concerns with using the BMI is that every child does not have the same body frame, but it gives the family an idea and how that can impact their childs health.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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more exercise is the answer
Right now, we have elementary age children with gym once a week because that is all the district can afford. We have third through fifth grade children only getting one recess in the afternoon because administrators and teachers say there is no time because of the demands of the MEAP and the changing curriculum.
Let's get these children active. The fact of the matter is the BMI will most likely be higher for low income children because it costs more money to eat healthy food. We cannot control what children eat at home but let's at least give their body that chance to be active at least twice a day while they are at school. The legislation should be for mandatory recess and a minimum of three gym classes per week.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Responsibility Lies With Parents, Not Schools
>This is also about the same time frame in which lazy teachers have been talking parents into drugging any kid that actually has some energy and wants to run and play.<
Poppycock. Why does every discussion about new -- and often cockamamie (like this one) -- legislative proposals to dump new tasks on our public schools have to turn into a teacher-bashing forum?
Teachers are not responsible for children becoming obese. Or becoming emaciated, either. The kid’ parents are. Period. End.
It’s parents who have to take charge on their child’s weight issues. The parents should be the ones imposie dietary and related behavioral discipline on their kids. Schools should be supportive, in properly and appropriately supervising kids whose parents actually try to deal with their kids’ weight issues, but only within the framework of the academic-educational task. That’s collaboration between parent and school.
Schools can’t be held responsible or accountable for the child’s success or failure in losing/gaining body weight. And It should not be the schools’ new responsibility to identify and institute measures to correct a kid’s problem with weight.
HB 5625 should be soundly rejected.
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Anonymous Citizen


- Joined on 11-22-2008
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Great idea for parent to wake up
We call child protective services if we see other neglect. Oprah calls you out on national TV if you are neglectful about weight with a child. We screen for scoliosis. CPS is on speed dial, unfortunately. I hate to call. Sometimes things like this need to be done for the good of the child. This IS wise leadership. There should be required parenting courses we often say, well this information supplied to parents is a solution. IT'S BOLD, not DISCRIMINATORY. As long as the information is sealed, goes right to the parent (like they have to sign for it to so they received it) or it is mailed or something, then how is a school or teacher going to discriminate against fat kids. Please! It's time for American parents to wise up. We thought the earth was flat at one point. This is great legislation. Thank goodness we no longer have the Inquisition for good scientific ideas!
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