A new Cornell University study found that sales of fruit increased by 100% in schools when it was moved to a colorful bowl

"It's not nutrition until someone eats it. You need to have foods that kids will eat, or they won't eat – or they'll eat worse" said Chris Wallace, Food Service Director for the Corning, New York School District.
We're focusing on giving Food Service Directors "low-cost/no cost" changes they can make immediately, said Brian Wansink, Co-Director of the Cornell Center of Behavioral Economics in Child Nutrition Programs (BEN). During his research presentation, he described other studies which showed:
- Decreasing the size of bowls from 18 ounces to 14 ounces reduced the size of the average cereal serving at breakfast by 24 percent.
- Creating a speedy "healthy express" checkout line for students not buying calorie-dense foods like desserts and chips, doubled the sales of healthy sandwiches.
- Moving the chocolate milk behind the plain milk led students to buy more plain milk.
- Keeping ice cream in a freezer with a closed opaque top significantly reduced the amount of ice cream taken.
- When cafeteria workers asked each child, "Do you want a salad?" salad sales increased by a third.
Source-Eurekalert
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