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By: Digna Patel, Jessica Kusner, Chris Perchinske, and Sean Smith

Cafeteria Food. By: Digna Patel, Jessica Kusner, Chris Perchinske, and Sean Smith. Most students in high school complain about the cafeteria food. They don't like the food that they serve or they just have never buy lunch, they have always packed lunch throughout their schooling. 

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By: Digna Patel, Jessica Kusner, Chris Perchinske, and Sean Smith

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  1. Cafeteria Food By: Digna Patel, Jessica Kusner, Chris Perchinske, and Sean Smith

  2. Most students in high school complain about the cafeteria food. They don't like the food that they serve or they just have never buy lunch, they have always packed lunch throughout their schooling.  • Most arguments are that the food served is over priced and not healthy. But some are that the students just simply don't like the food.   • Some also say that cafeteria food serves more unhealthy food than healthy food. Introduction

  3. There were many different ideas that our group found on Cafeteria Food. We had articles, data, and videos on:  • The rising cost of lunch in the cafeteria  • How healthy are the school lunches • Looking into Solon High Schools own cafeteria  • A pole of students on how much they buy or pack lunch • An interview with the cafeteria ladies  • Comparing cafeteria food to fast food chains. Summarizing the Group Findings

  4. Group Thesis • Although cafeteria food is approved to be sufficient for high school students, portions are smaller and the food sometimes is less than edible.

  5. http://woodridge.patch.com/articles/video-how-district-68-cafeteria-food-compares-with-its-fast-food-counterparts#video-5742309http://woodridge.patch.com/articles/video-how-district-68-cafeteria-food-compares-with-its-fast-food-counterparts#video-5742309 This video explains that how the cafeteria food has more nutritions, less calories, and healthier while Mc Donald's, Papa John's, and Subway's  sandwiches contains more calories, less healthier, and expensive. It also compares the ingredients of the cafeteria food and the fast food chain's food and the result shows preferring the cafeteria food.    The Rhetorical Strategies: 1. Exposition-it analyze information by presenting an idea of preferring cafeteria food than fast food chain's food. 2. Analogies-draws a comparison between cafeteria food vs. fast food. Cafeteria Food vs. Fast Food

  6. 1.  Do you buy lunch everyday?  • Two people said yes, tweleve people said no • 2.  Have you ever bought lunch? • Eight people said yes, six people said no • 3.  Did you buy lunch last year but not this year? • Three people said yes, eleven people said no • 4.  Have you always packed a lunch? • Seven people said yes, seven people said no  • Conclusion- The results of the survey seems that most of the class is split. People who have always packed lunch will always pack lunch and people who buy lunch will buy. But there was a small handful of people who changed their opinion on the cafeteria food. • Rhetorical Strategies- Compare and Contrast, appeals to reason, and analogies. Pole of the Students

  7. Child Nutrition Bill by President Obama. • Most Students Incurred a 12.5% increase. • Unrealistic goals. • Financial burden for low income Families. Rising Cost of School Lunches

  8. The Interview: Questions to ask yourself: • Did the price go up? • Are portions smaller? • Is the food healthy? • What was taken off the menu? Rhetorical Strategies: • Loaded Words • Tone-”Shocking” • Appeals to reason

  9. Purely Informative • Appeal to authority       Sushi! Tour of the Kitchen

  10. Chicago Students Fight Back Against Bad School Lunches By Barbara Pinto and Michael Murray Rhetorical Strategies: • Appeal to emotion-"I worry that kids are getting offered junk and convenience food" • Appeal to authority-CEO of Chicago Public Schools, Ron Huberman

  11. Santos, Fernanda. "Public Schools Face the Rising Costs of Serving Lunch." New York Times. 19 Sept. 2011. Web. 18 Oct. 2011. <www.nytimes.com/2011/09/20/education/20lunch.html?_r=1>.     Solon Schools, Cindy. "School Cafeteria Interview." Personal interview. 21 Oct. 21011.     Tussing, Melissa. "VIDEO: How District 68 Cafeteria Food Compares With Its Fast Food Counterparts - Woodridge, IL Patch." Woodridge, IL Patch - News, Sports, Events, Businesses & Deals. 21 Apr. 2011. Web. 26 Oct. 2011. http://woodridge.patch.com/articles/video-how-district-68-cafeteria-food-compares-with-its-fast-food-counterparts#video-5742309.     Gottlieb, Robert. "Cafeteria Food Fight | Nurturing the Student Body - Los Angeles Times." Featured Articles From The Los Angeles Times. Los Angleles Times, 02 Oct. 2011. Web. 26 Oct. 2011.     <http://articles.latimes.com/2011/oct/02/entertainment/la-oe-gottlieb-los-angeles-schools-healthy-food-ca-20111002>.  Citation added:  ? dont know where to put this chris.. Pinto, Barbara, and Michael Murray. "Chicago Students Fight Back Against Bad School Lunches - ABC News." ABCNews.com: Daily News, Breaking News and Video Broadcasts - ABC News. 24 Mar. 2010. Web. 26 Oct. 2011. <http://abcnews.go.com/WN/chicago-students-fight-back-bad-school-lunches/story?id=10193152>. Bibliography

  12. THE END

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