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Student's Body Fat % on Report Cards
heard this on the radio this morning, found a *very* brief article http://www.kxan.com/Global/story.asp...1&nav=0s3dVVLw
statelawmaker in Texas is trying to get a student's body fat % put on their report cards. What do you think? |
Is there a public fat circling ceremony? There really needs to be one.
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Has humiliation ever helped anyone lose weight? I would really like to know the statistics on it. If it's such an effective tool, no one would be overweight because they woiuldn't want to be put through such pain.
All humiliation does is cause warped eating habits. A person will starve themself in public and binge in private. I personally feel that humiliation will cause nothing but an eating disorder. Why do people think this will work? |
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The cheer coach at my daughters' high school was real big on trying to humiliate them into losing weight. She'd weigh them in and loudly announce their weight. One girl developed anorexia during her senior year and last I heard, still has it....hottytoddy, if you see this, you know who I mean.:(
There is NO reason to humiliate people. |
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Reminds me of the drill team at my high school. The choreographer/director was some washed-up never-was Rockette type who allowed the dancers to weigh 100 pounds for five feet of height and 2 pounds for every additional inch. Several of my friends were pretty, healthy girls who turned into walking skeletons for the "honor" of shaking their sequin-covered asses during halftime :( |
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Would it humiliate people? The kid dosn't have to show the report card to anyone but his parents.
Is it more humiliating than a F-grade? It seems more like an invasion of privacy issue and something that is not what schools are there to do. |
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This would be much more humiliating than getting bad grades, IMO. They need to go back to decent lunches and disallow kids from drinking pop in school. |
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The problem with the "There's no need to humiliate people" argument is that plenty of parents DO NOT realize that their kids are unhealthy. Or how unhealthy they are. Especially if the parents are obese themselves.
I totally understand the paranoia about enforcing unhealthily low weights, or publically announcing weight in gym class (I was weight-conscious by age 9 -- I still remember comparing my weight to every other girl's in the class when our gym teacher announced weights out loud in fourth and fifth grade). But this isn't something that public, nor is it designed to humiliate kids or promote anorexia. It's designed to let people know that having a BMI of 32 at age 12 isn't safe. The problem with healthier lunches and removing soda machines is that it doesn't matter what you're providing when the attitudes towards food are coming from home. Many school districts have mentioned that they've tried to serve healthier lunches and KIDS WON'T BUY THEM. Or kids are bringing their own unhealthy lunches from home. It's not the school's fault -- by the time the kids get there, they've already been inundated with messages (mostly from parents) on what's acceptable to eat and what's not. |
I think that most parents won't care about the BMI. If their kid is overweight, they either know it already or they're so deep in denial that they'll ignore it. I can't think of one set of parents who would go, "Whoa! What a shock! Could my kid be overweight?" if they got a card that had a high BMI.
Sad, but true. |
You could just make it a peer-vote. Have three categories:
Too-skinny Average range Fat The teacher could hold up silhouettes as examples and have a show of hands. Then they just add that notation to the report card . . . and send it home. |
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