A new study has provided hard facts to back up what's generally accepted as fact, that eating breakfast helps students in school. The study, the first large-scale report done in Canada, followed 6,000 students in Toronto for two years. The study found that students who ate breakfast more frequently were more likely to be on track for graduation than students who didn't eat breakfast on a regular basis.
EditOperations
- Food safety alert: Check what ground beef is in your freezer, USDA advises
- A look at which states have the healthiest school lunches
- Sodexo's sales see a boost thanks to new business, the continued return to the office and strong retail spending
- Eating school meals associated with better diet quality among students
- Go behind the scenes at the MSU Meat Lab
Breakfast boosts students' performance, study
Students who eat breakfast are more likely to be on track for graduation. Jun. 13, 2012Want breaking news at your fingertips?
Click here or text FSD to (877) 281-7554 to receive text alerts from FoodService Director and get the news and insights that matter to your operation.
Thanks for signing up!
Click here to complete your profileMultimedia
The Latest
Listen to your daily news: FSD PodcastsNew episodes weekdays