Like a Prayer

Cross-posted over at the Corner:

Having botched the three R’s, many American schools are now making do with a fourth instead—recycling. The following extracts come from a Saturday New York Times story about efforts to bring recycling to school lunch:

“Ziplocs are the biggest misstep,” said Julie Corbett, a mother in Oakland, Calif., whose two girls attend a school with an eco-friendly lunch policy. In school years past, she said, many a morning came unhinged when the girls were sent to school with disposable sandwich bags.

“That’s when the kids have meltdowns, because they don’t want to be shamed at school,” Ms. Corbett said. “It’s a big deal.”

…Judith Wagner, a professor of education at Whittier College in California who directs its laboratory school for elementary and middle-school children, has also been struggling with how to get parents’ support for less wasteful lunches.

“Parents will say things like, ‘Well, I want her to have a choice, and if I put in a peanut butter-and-jelly sandwich and a ham sandwich, she has a choice,’ ” Professor Wagner said. “And each one comes in its own separate plastic bag.”

What comes next, she said, is a hard call. “Do you go back to the parents and say, ‘Gosh, can you rethink the plastic bags and all this food?’ Or do you talk to the children, and you make the children feel guilty because they’re throwing this all away?”

… Ms. Corbett, the Oakland parent, said the social pressure her children felt regarding recyclable products was palpable.

Still, she says, plasticware can be a pain to clean, and is not cheap. When she thinks it is likely that her daughters will lose the containers — if, for instance, they’re going on a field trip — she uses waxed-paper sleeves, like the kind bakeries use for cookies, to hold sandwiches instead.

“It’s still a no-no because you’re still having to throw that away, but it is biodegradable, it does compost, so you’re not as guilty,” she said.

Yes, it’s a religion.

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4 Responses to Like a Prayer

  1. ‘Well, I want her to have a choice, and if I put in a peanut butter-and-jelly sandwich and a ham sandwich, she has a choice,’

    That’s the craziest thing … I have to wonder if that really happens? Why not get inspired by Dali, put a burning telephone book in with their lunch, why limit the choice to just “traditional” food items?! Give them a REAL choice – food or surrealism!

  2. RandyB says:

    The intersection of the two eminent domains of statism — the environment and children. Since the environment belongs to all of us, the state can regulate the individual’s use of it. Because we wouldn’t get very far trying to tell adults they can’t use plastic bags, we’ll indoctrinate the children, like in liberally-slanted history classes.

    Someone should teach the kids a lesson about expansive government by putting swastikas on reusable bags.

  3. D says:

    How is this about statism? Social pressure is a conservative approach. What’s wrong with being a little more mindful of the environment as you go about your daily activities?

    A similar kind of social pressure has led Denver residents to be much more efficient in water use. This is important because water is becoming a scarce resource in the Rocky Mounain region.

  4. Just Ken says:

    If the kid is old enough to bitch about it then she/he is old enough to pack it themselves.

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