Newham school wins a tasty £5k prize!

Accessibility Menu

Newham school wins a tasty £5k prize!

Published by yemisi for London Borough Of Newham - Head Office in Local Government and also in Central Government
Tuesday 21st October 2008 - 2:45pm

RSS View more news and articles by London Borough of Newham

Search more member organisations in our Directory

More from London Borough of Newham

Park Primary School in Newham, London, has won the School Food Trusts Million Meals School of the Month competition in recognition of the innovative ways they improved their meal service and raised the profile of healthy eating across the school. The Trust has awarded Park Primary £5,000 to further the improvements they have already made. 

Park Primary, successfully raised the profile of healthy eating to increase awareness of their service across the school with pupils, parents, staff, governors and other stakeholders. They reviewed the school dinner menu based on feedback from the School Council and the wider school community and implemented widespread changes, including installing a salad bar and making effective changes to the service counter.

The School Council arranged a Healthy Eating Evening for parents to illustrate the changes that had been made and to promote the quality of the school food service as well as the nutritional value of food provided. And they also enhanced the promotion of the meal service to ensure all pupils understood the healthy eating message and the importance of a healthy lifestyle.

Headteacher Ann Buckingham said All of us here are thrilled to win this award, its a resounding testimony to the hard work and dedication put in by pupils, staff and governors all of whom are focused on making lunchtime at Park Primary School a great experience for everyone. We plan to spend the £5,000 prize money replacing basic equipment such as plates and serving dishes plus to buy a brand sparkling new salad bar to encourage even more youngsters to get their 5-a-day during lunchtime.

Sally Sutherland, Catering Development Manager for London Borough of Newham said
Park Primary School has an excellent school management team and they enthuse pupils, parents and most importantly the school cook that their views matter and that change is possible. Their approach is self perpetuating and has brought them to where they are today


The School of the Month competition is a new initiative set up by the School Food Trust to recognise excellence and innovation in the area of school food. It allows all the schools that are signed up to the School Food Trusts Million Meals campaign the chance to win £5,000 every month.


The Million Meals campaign aims to improve the health and wellbeing of children by getting a million more students eating school meals by 2010. Over 3,500 schools across the country have already signed up to the campaign.


Prue Leith, Chair of the School Food Trust, said: Huge congratulations to Park Primary School! To be selected as our School of the Month is no mean achievement and I know that behind the result is a terrific lot of hard and dedicated work. I hope everyone is delighted with themselves. They deserve to be.
 

Comments

No comments yet...

Be the first and post your views below.

Please Login to comment

To comment you must be logged in. You can either Login or Register

LATEST #ukhousing TWEETS

FACEBOOK RECOMMENDATIONS

Latest jobs

Latest jobs

Find and search more jobs in our Jobs Site...

Latest 24dash poll

Can social landlords provide broadband for tenants without state funding?


previous polls Previous polls

Latest blog posts

Lynne Featherstone

"Mike tells Boris what he things of his piddling cut in council tax!"

Published by Lynne Featherstone

Mike Tuffrey always did have a way of telling it like it is. In my day on the London Assembly it was Ken on the...

Anne Rowlands

"Size, it's all relative"

Published by Anne Rowlands

I found myself agreeing with the findings of the recent Chartered Institute of Housing report - Does size matter - or...

Andy Boddington

"Janet Street-Porter is right about Willy Wonka managers at the BBC but so wrong about local radio"

Published by Andy Boddington

In today’s Independent on Sunday, col