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Risker
Dec 29th, 2008, 02:50 PM
Companies including Vimto and Britvic, the company behind Tango, have been criticised for targeting children at schools with adverts disguised as "educational material" – such as creating a poem in praise of a soft drink and promoting a bag of crisps as healthier than an apple.

A new report, called "Through the back door", argues that some food and drink companies are using curriculum packs to advertise their products to children at school.

The Children's Food Campaign report claims that two-thirds of the curriculum packs surveyed contained company logos, two-thirds contained promotions for a product and two-thirds contained misinformation.

CFC, a lobby group for healthy food, highlighted a "blatant promotion" by Vimto, maker of the purple soft drink, where teachers in more than 1,000 schools were encouraged to use English lessons to promote the drink, at one time promoted by the animated Purple Ronnie character.

According to CFC, pupils were asked to write a poem in praise of Vimto for National Poetry Day.

The report found that the European Snack Association, backed by Pringles, KP and Walkers, compared the nutrient content of a 30g bag of crisps favourably with that of an apple.

"As you can see the bag of chips [crisps] provides from twice to thirty times as much of all the vitamins and minerals, three times as much energy, more fibre and complex carbohydrate," ran an extract selected by the CFC. "So how do you define a healthier food – one that is nutritionally inferior?"

Britvic, producer of soft drinks including Tango, used a picture on a chart of how soft drinks were made using "gooditives", not additives.

"We were flabbergasted by some of the claims in these packs," said the CFC co-ordinator, Richard Watts. "We found nutrition lesson plans about the benefits of eating crisps, claiming that colourings in fizzy drinks were to restore the fruit's natural colour, and telling children to only eat fruit and vegetables in moderation."

CFC has produced a list of the "top 10 dodgy claims" that it found were made by companies.

The claims included: children should not reduce food intake to lose weight, food colouring restores colour lost during processing, everybody should eat three portions of dairy products a day, some people with unhealthy diets should eat more cheese, and sugary food and drink products can be compared to bread, rice and pasta for carbohydrates.

CFC said that if these practices were tried in TV or print advertising they would be blocked, but marketing in schools is unregulated.

Commercial activity in schools is covered by guidelines produced by the Department for Children, Schools and Families and a code from the advertisers' body ISBA (Incorporated Society of British Advertisers).

The CFC, which says that UK companies spend £300m annually on advertising in schools, claims that these guidelines are "flouted with impunity".

The organisation claims that Magenta, a company that produces in-classroom advertising, offers a "captive audience of some 7.5m young people, their teachers, school managers, governors, parents and the wider community".

However, recent reports by Ofcom, the Advertising Standards Authority and the Department of Health have all found that so-called junk food marketing practices are mostly on the decrease.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2008/dec/29/vimto-tango-school-advertising

Gorilla
Dec 29th, 2008, 03:14 PM
"Pepsi Presents Addition And Subtraction" with Troy McClure

Troy: Now, turn to the next problem. If you have three Pepsis and drink one, how much more refreshed are you? You, the redhead in the Chicago school system?

Girl: Pepsi?

Troy: Partial credit!

http://homepage.smc.edu/nestler_andrew/pepsi.jpg

horselesspaul
Dec 29th, 2008, 03:18 PM
"Pepsi Presents Addition And Subtraction" with Troy McClure

Troy: Now, turn to the next problem. If you have three Pepsis and drink one, how much more refreshed are you? You, the redhead in the Chicago school system?

Girl: Pepsi?

Troy: Partial credit!

http://homepage.smc.edu/nestler_andrew/pepsi.jpg
Uber lol. I love Troy McClure.

bradders
Dec 29th, 2008, 11:14 PM
Back in Ireland we used to have coke and other ads throughout the school, they did that for the money they desperately needed to run the school. The coke machines used to make a fortune for the school, all would empty and need restocking every day. Terrible situation, I'd hate to see this creeping in.

ellaminnowpea
Dec 30th, 2008, 03:16 AM
This type of advertising is insane. I didn't know that was even legal! Makes me never want to have kids.

It really scares the shit out me... If I continue with a career in healthcare and nutrition, I'm going to have to deal with this incredibly brainwashed generation.

Qaxt
Dec 30th, 2008, 07:45 AM
Yeah... it's gross.

Also, there's a GIANT!!! banner at my school advertising milk. It is seriously like 15-20 feet long and in the cafeteria. And it says something along the lines of, "Some studies suggest that teens who drink milk are slimmer and more fit!" And it has a few famous "sexy" people on there. It's so disgusting.... I want to stick up a sign right next to it saying, "Yeah, and others suggest that dairy causes cancer." But I'd get suspended for that, I think.

It's right next to me in study hall, too. I have spent a couple study halls giving it death glares.

bradders
Dec 30th, 2008, 10:42 AM
At the moment they're banning adverts for all sorts of things during kids tv and before 9pm as well so it is quite bizarre that this kind of thing was allowed to happen.

horselesspaul
Dec 30th, 2008, 10:51 AM
What do the schools get out of it, I wonder?

bradders
Dec 30th, 2008, 11:09 AM
free activities for the kids to shut them up for five minutes and maybe a 'donation' to the school's capital works fund.

Cherry
Dec 30th, 2008, 11:37 AM
free activities for the kids to shut them up for five minutes.

:eek:

Shut them up for five minutes?! Right. That's what teaching's all about. :rolleyes: I usually can't SPARE five minutes.

I wouldn't worry too much. I'm sure that they don't often get used, or not in the way that they were intended. If you were teaching children about advertising then I'd imagine those packs would be useful to arm them against it.

bradders
Dec 30th, 2008, 11:46 AM
hope I didn't offend, the smiley didn't show, I was being a bit tongue in cheek really.

Cherry
Dec 30th, 2008, 11:46 AM
good good

Guate_Vegan
Dec 31st, 2008, 03:16 PM
This type of advertising is insane. I didn't know that was even legal! Makes me never want to have kids.

It really scares the shit out me... If I continue with a career in healthcare and nutrition, I'm going to have to deal with this incredibly brainwashed generation.

That's why I'm a firm believer in homeschooling. If I can't home school later in my life for some reason then I am not having/adopting kids. Unless I know a fellow vegan person with a similar mindset can do it. Like those obsessive Fundamentalist Christian people do it we can do it too lol except ..we're not crazy.

bradders
Dec 31st, 2008, 03:27 PM
I don't really believe in home - schooling generally. The social interactions etc are extremely important for development and integration and standard schooling is needed to ensure that the full resources needed such as science labs, media suites etc are available and that the child gains the necessary qualifications for academic or other pursuits to be chosen by the child. I know the child would be exposed to brands, advertising etc etc but provided you equip the child with the faculties to challenge this, then this need not be a problem. I would never send a child to a religous scholl though, I'd send them miles to a secular school first.
P.S. don't know what schools are like in the US

Guate_Vegan
Dec 31st, 2008, 04:43 PM
I think the reason I'm so "only homeschooling and that's it" is because I had such a bad experience going to school in general. Right now I'm still in school but I'm older and I really don't give a crap lol except for school work, that's why I can't wait until college. But I would never want my kids to go through having to go to school :P I personally believe I'd be much happier now if I didn't have had to go to school away from home, and there's a lot of opportunities for interaction for homeschooled kids, with other kids. I would want my vegan kids to have mostly vegan friends and I believe that's most likely to happen through my vegan friend's kids so eh, turns out the same way either way.

bradders
Dec 31st, 2008, 04:57 PM
not quite 6-7 hours, 5 days a week, 39 weeks a year of interaction with hundreds of people for c.14 years though is it? I don't believe in segregation of any kind and saying that you'd really only want your kid(s) to have vegan friends goes against that. I would want my kids to mix with as broad a range of people as they can and in a world where vegans are far from being in the majority that means that they would inevitably have friends who weren't vegan. On the positive side this would also give the kids a chance to show the qualities of the vegan lifestyle to others from an early age. Of course it would be entirely the kids choice if they were to stay vegan, it would never be my place to force a lifestyle on anyone and that includes my kids.
For quite a part of my school life I didn't have it easy either but I would still have chosen that over home schooling. One of the main reasons for my problems in school was that it was catholic and I wasn't anymore further complicated by being English in the backside of Mayo. But in the end the difficulties I faced have made me stronger and I would not be me had I not gone through them.

Guate_Vegan
Dec 31st, 2008, 05:44 PM
Eh, I'm still sticking to my opinion.

vava
Dec 31st, 2008, 05:54 PM
guate - I can see exactly where you are coming from and I applaud the reasoning but.... I tried to make my children as thoughtful and caring people as I could but then sooner or later you have to let them out into the big bad world to deal with ignorant gits and they are likely to be very hurt indeed quickly unless they realise that there are a lot of evil folk in the world that don't have their 'friends' best interests at heart.

Guate_Vegan
Dec 31st, 2008, 05:58 PM
Yeah, I understand that, that's why I would most likely let them go to a normal high school since the first 14 years they've already learned what's good and what isn't.

Also, about the bad world, that's why most likely I WON'T be having children because I find it kind of irresponsible to be bringing more kids into a world that's so miserable, if not for you than for others, and there's plenty of kids already here that need our help. But this discussion can also apply to adoptive kids of course, which what I was talking about personally.

I think it would take a lot for me to actually have a kid and I don't think I would adopt until I'm completely ready to give up my life.. lol I kinda find kids as life suckers :P

RebeccaDye
Dec 31st, 2008, 07:05 PM
However, recent reports by Ofcom, the Advertising Standards Authority and the Department of Health have all found that so-called junk food marketing practices are mostly on the decrease.

I've noticed this in my school especially, adverts for fizzy drinks have been replaced with 'healthy posters' with cringeworthy messages like "Kumquat may" superimposed on oranges.

bradders
Jan 1st, 2009, 06:45 PM
"Kumquat may" .
mind if I throw up after having to read that appalling, horrific use of the language?

RebeccaDye
Jan 1st, 2009, 07:23 PM
Good sir, I wouldn't mind in the least. In fact, I think it necessary.

bradders
Jan 1st, 2009, 07:41 PM
bleeeeuuugggghhhhh

RebeccaDye
Jan 1st, 2009, 07:49 PM
:D

Lisey_duck
Jan 1st, 2009, 07:54 PM
Quaxt - try showing the Simpsons episode where the school milk turns out to come from rats...