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#lunchladies — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #lunchladies, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Digesting Food Studies (the CFS podcast)—Episode 106: School Food Programs

    rss.com/podcasts/digesting-foo

    With the creation of Canada’s National School Food Program, myriad questions, challenges, and opportunities arise. Student success, cultural identity, food provisioning, and economics are all at play. As Rachel Engler-Stringer tells us in this episode, ongoing research and reflection will be needed.

    First, Alexia Moyer’s Amuse Bouche segment reveals a number of lessons—some more useful than others—from Saskatchewan’s early 1900s school food planning. And in the After Taste, Penelope Stam responds to the focus article, “The case for a Canadian national school food program” (doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i3) from Vol. 5 No. 3 of Canadian Food Studies.

    #DigestingFoodStudies
    #SchoolFood
    #FoodPrograms
    #StudentSuccess
    #PrimarySchools
    #SecondarySchools
    #SchoolBoards
    #Hunger
    #MentalHealth
    #CulturalIdentity
    #FoodSovereignty
    #FoodSecurity
    #FoodCulture
    #SchoolCafeterias
    #LunchLadies
    #FoodPodcast

    photo: Alexia Moyer

  2. Digesting Food Studies (the CFS podcast)—Episode 106: School Food Programs

    rss.com/podcasts/digesting-foo

    With the creation of Canada’s National School Food Program, myriad questions, challenges, and opportunities arise. Student success, cultural identity, food provisioning, and economics are all at play. As Rachel Engler-Stringer tells us in this episode, ongoing research and reflection will be needed.

    First, Alexia Moyer’s Amuse Bouche segment reveals a number of lessons—some more useful than others—from Saskatchewan’s early 1900s school food planning. And in the After Taste, Penelope Stam responds to the focus article, “The case for a Canadian national school food program” (doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i3) from Vol. 5 No. 3 of Canadian Food Studies.

    #DigestingFoodStudies
    #SchoolFood
    #FoodPrograms
    #StudentSuccess
    #PrimarySchools
    #SecondarySchools
    #SchoolBoards
    #Hunger
    #MentalHealth
    #CulturalIdentity
    #FoodSovereignty
    #FoodSecurity
    #FoodCulture
    #SchoolCafeterias
    #LunchLadies
    #FoodPodcast

    photo: Alexia Moyer

  3. Digesting Food Studies (the CFS podcast)—Episode 106: School Food Programs

    rss.com/podcasts/digesting-foo

    With the creation of Canada’s National School Food Program, myriad questions, challenges, and opportunities arise. Student success, cultural identity, food provisioning, and economics are all at play. As Rachel Engler-Stringer tells us in this episode, ongoing research and reflection will be needed.

    First, Alexia Moyer’s Amuse Bouche segment reveals a number of lessons—some more useful than others—from Saskatchewan’s early 1900s school food planning. And in the After Taste, Penelope Stam responds to the focus article, “The case for a Canadian national school food program” (doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i3) from Vol. 5 No. 3 of Canadian Food Studies.

    #DigestingFoodStudies
    #SchoolFood
    #FoodPrograms
    #StudentSuccess
    #PrimarySchools
    #SecondarySchools
    #SchoolBoards
    #Hunger
    #MentalHealth
    #CulturalIdentity
    #FoodSovereignty
    #FoodSecurity
    #FoodCulture
    #SchoolCafeterias
    #LunchLadies
    #FoodPodcast

    photo: Alexia Moyer

  4. Digesting Food Studies (the CFS podcast)—Episode 106: School Food Programs

    rss.com/podcasts/digesting-foo

    With the creation of Canada’s National School Food Program, myriad questions, challenges, and opportunities arise. Student success, cultural identity, food provisioning, and economics are all at play. As Rachel Engler-Stringer tells us in this episode, ongoing research and reflection will be needed.

    First, Alexia Moyer’s Amuse Bouche segment reveals a number of lessons—some more useful than others—from Saskatchewan’s early 1900s school food planning. And in the After Taste, Penelope Stam responds to the focus article, “The case for a Canadian national school food program” (doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i3) from Vol. 5 No. 3 of Canadian Food Studies.

    #DigestingFoodStudies
    #SchoolFood
    #FoodPrograms
    #StudentSuccess
    #PrimarySchools
    #SecondarySchools
    #SchoolBoards
    #Hunger
    #MentalHealth
    #CulturalIdentity
    #FoodSovereignty
    #FoodSecurity
    #FoodCulture
    #SchoolCafeterias
    #LunchLadies
    #FoodPodcast

    photo: Alexia Moyer

  5. Digesting Food Studies (the CFS podcast)—Episode 106: School Food Programs

    rss.com/podcasts/digesting-foo

    With the creation of Canada’s National School Food Program, myriad questions, challenges, and opportunities arise. Student success, cultural identity, food provisioning, and economics are all at play. As Rachel Engler-Stringer tells us in this episode, ongoing research and reflection will be needed.

    First, Alexia Moyer’s Amuse Bouche segment reveals a number of lessons—some more useful than others—from Saskatchewan’s early 1900s school food planning. And in the After Taste, Penelope Stam responds to the focus article, “The case for a Canadian national school food program” (doi.org/10.15353/cfs-rcea.v5i3) from Vol. 5 No. 3 of Canadian Food Studies.

    #DigestingFoodStudies
    #SchoolFood
    #FoodPrograms
    #StudentSuccess
    #PrimarySchools
    #SecondarySchools
    #SchoolBoards
    #Hunger
    #MentalHealth
    #CulturalIdentity
    #FoodSovereignty
    #FoodSecurity
    #FoodCulture
    #SchoolCafeterias
    #LunchLadies
    #FoodPodcast

    photo: Alexia Moyer