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Founded by the Child Nutrition Act of 1966, the School
Breakfast Program (SBP), like the National School Lunch
Program (NSLP), provides nutritious meals to students
at participating schools (and to children in a few residential
child care institutions). Eligible students receive free
or reduced-price breakfasts.
The number of schools participating in the SBP increased
dramatically in the early 1990s, growing by nearly 9 percent
annually between fiscal 1989 and fiscal 1995. Since then,
the number of participating schools has continued to increase,
although participation still lags that of the NSLP (with
more than 101,000 schools and residential child care institutions participating). In 2010, 88,642
schools and residential child care institutions participated in the SBP, up from 87,814 in 2009.
Student participation in the SBP has also grown.
In fiscal 1989, 3.7 million students participated in the
program on a given school day, and a total of 658 million
breakfasts were served. In fiscal 2010, 11.6 million students
participated in the program daily, 5 percent more than
the previous year. Most participants have high need; of
the 1.9 billion breakfasts served, 75 percent were free
and another 9 percent were provided at reduced price.
Spending for the program totaled $2.8 billion in 2010,
10 percent more than in the previous year.
An ERS-sponsored study found that elementary school-age students are more likely to participate in the SBP when they come from lower income or time-constrained households. Children with access to the SBP are more likely to eat breakfast in the morning. Program access may enhance food security among families at the margin of food insecurity.
Another ERS-sponsored study found that by increasing the likelihood that children would eat breakfast, SBP was associated with children having a lower Body Mass Index (BMI), a measure of weight status.
Recommended readings—ERS research projects related to the SBP have studied
the effects of school
nutrition programs on children's nutritional status
and the feasibility
of measuring the effect of school breakfasts on learning.
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