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District Event

LCAP PAC Meeting
Washington Room, Serna Center

The Local Control and Accountability Plan (LCAP) Parent Advisory Committee (PAC) is a key group in Â鶹ԭ´´â€™s stakeholder engagement process. The input provided by the LCAP PAC informs the development of the LCAP, which in turn influences the district’s strategic actions and services to improve outcomes for students. The LCAP PAC meets monthly to engage in discussion, review data, and plan outreach to other stakeholders – all to support the formation of informed input/recommendations to the Superintendent and Board of Education.

District Event

LCAP PAC Meeting
Washington Room, Serna Center

The Local Control and Accountability Plan (LCAP) Parent Advisory Committee (PAC) is a key group in Â鶹ԭ´´â€™s stakeholder engagement process. The input provided by the LCAP PAC informs the development of the LCAP, which in turn influences the district’s strategic actions and services to improve outcomes for students. The LCAP PAC meets monthly to engage in discussion, review data, and plan outreach to other stakeholders – all to support the formation of informed input/recommendations to the Superintendent and Board of Education.

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Healthy Celebrations at School

With a few easy changes, parents, teachers and school administrators can shift the focus of school parties and celebrations from unhealthy food to healthy fun.

Healthy celebration ideas

CLASSROOM CELEBRATIONS

Schools can promote a positive learning environment by shifting the focus from food during classroom celebrations. If food is served,it must be non-allergenic and compliant with school nutrition regulations.

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Healthy Fundraisers

Healthy fundraisers set a positive example and support:

  1. Healthy eating and physical activity by children

  2. Nutrition education

  3. Parents’ efforts to feed their children healthy food

  4. The fundraising needs of schools

District Wellness Committee & Policy

Overview

For the first time in two centuries, the current generation of children in America are on trend to have shorter life expectancy than their parents. Only 4% ofAmerican children eat their recommended amounts of fruits and vegetables. Overconsumption of sugar and junk food have impacted health outcomes for ourstudents. Diet related diseases like Type 2 diabetes, obesity and heart disease are preventable when children regularly eat a healthy diet. Adopting these healthy behaviors is easier during childhood and adolescence, compared to changing unhealthy behaviors during adulthood.