Mid day meals

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Introduction

In a landmark order dated 28 November 2001, the Supreme Court of India directed all state governments to introduce cooked mid-day meals in primary schools within six months.


6MID_0_0_0.jpg

Concept Map

Error: Mind Map file Mid day meal.mm not found


Reference books

Useful websites

  1. Government of India portal on MMS, which has detailed information about working of the MMS. This includes a document with Frequently Asked Questions on MMS
  2. Wikipedia page on MMS
  3. Right to Food site

Learning Outlines

The MMS programme is the largest feeding programme in the world! From an ELM point of view, there is enormous learning possibilities from studying the design and implementation of the programme.

The programme involves many actors, ranging from the children who are the beneficiaries, to the cooks who produce the food, to the teachers/head teachers who facilitate the programme on a daily basis. The programme has a huge logistical component, including the massive movement of foodgrains from FCI godowns to schools across the country, the provision of fuel (cooking gas in most places), the additional and critical (from a nutrition point of view) items such as vegetables, fruits, eggs etc. This requires a large set of people administering the programme regularly and also supervising the implementation.

The ELM processes too can be studied elaborately for the MMS programme. Understanding the vision of the programme, its design and implementation, and the gaps between these can help education leaders at all levels to reflect, review and revise the programme.


Key Idea # 1 Why MMS? Objectives of MMS

Learning objectives

  1. Understanding the vision of the programme
  2. Understanding the goals/aims
  3. Understanding the programme design vis-a-vis the vision/aims
  4. Understanding the programme implementation vis-a-vis the design

Notes for transaction/training

===Activity No #1=== mid day meals structures identifying actors in the MMS ===Activity No #2 === mid day meals processes identifying and studying the ELM processes in the MMS

Key Idea # 2 Quality of MMS

Learning objectives

  1. Role of quality of the processes
  2. Role of quality of the food
  3. Hygiene aspect
  4. Quality of the social processes connected to the MMS in the school

Notes for transaction/training

Activity No # 1

mid day meals quality enhancing nutrition

Activity No # 2

Key Idea # 3 Challenges

  1. Issues of inclusion / exclusion
  2. Financing the MMS - implications for quality
  3. Social inclusion goals
  4. Nutrition and food quality

Learning objectives

Notes for transaction/training

===Activity No #=== mid day meals challenges quality of processes and food cooked

Activity No #

Research

Many studies have been carried out on MMS, including

  1. Karnataka study on Akshara Dasoha, by Policy Planning Unit
  2. A desk review of the Mid-Day Meals Programme, July 2007

http://www.iimahd.ernet.in/~satish/MDMJISPEPaper(2).pdf AN EVALUATION OF MID DAY MEAL SCHEME - IIM Ahmedabad faculty], focusing on the quality of nutrition

Articles and Papers

Prof Jean Dreze has written extensively on the MMS design and implementation in various states and the benefits and shortcomings

  1. Mid-Day Meals and Children’s Rights
  2. THE FUTURE OF MID-DAY MEALS
  3. “Mid-Day Meals in Primary Schools: Achievements and Challenges”, Economic and Political Weekly, 18 November, 2006. Perspectives.

Prof Reetika Khera has written extensively on the MMS design and implementation in various states and the benefits and shortcomings Mid-Day Meals in Primary Schools Achievements and Challenges - REETIKA KHERA


Case studies

Community involvement

Scheme provisions for community engagement One minute film on community involvement


Kitchen gardens

Food poisoning

Going beyond mid day meals

Pondicherry

supplying breakfast

Karnataka

Ksheera Bhagyya

Health

MHRD provision for Folic acid, Iron tablets, De-worming

Community project

In many places, the community contributes to the MMS by providing vegetables and fruits (local produce). In many cases, schools have developed 'kitchen gardens' to grow fruits and vegetables to add to the nutritional value of the meals.