Abstract

The study sought to establish the benefits of school feeding programme (SFP) in Western Zambia. It also brought out the challenges encountered in the execution of the programme. This article is an extract from one of the objectives of ongoing study. School feeding entails the distribution of food commodities to children who attend school. The commodities may be locally grown and purchased or contributed by international donor community. The food may be consumed by the learners in school. In other settings, it may be given as take-home ration for consumption by the families that regularly send their children to school. The study employed a descriptive survey research design to collect, analyse and interpret both quantitative and qualitative data from 415 respondents. The results of the study showed that the school feeding programme is an intervention which has enormous education benefits; equitable access to education, increased school enrolment, improved attendance, punctuality and academic performance. Other benefits include: health and nutrition, social protection, parent involvement, and opportunities for local farmers. However, challenges were also reported; there were some possible negative attributes to the increase in the enrolment rates, that is, the educational quality may be compromised if the number of learners exceeds available resources such as desks, text books, teachers, and irregular supply of food to schools. The study recommended that plans and measures should be put in place by the government, relevant ministries and development partners on how to increase existing human, physical, and financial resources for the school feeding programme to be effective and sustainable. SFP should also be decentralized to the schools and community levels with more support from provincial offices to ensure a more effective school feeding programme.

Highlights

  • School Feeding Programme (SFP) can be broadly defined as the provision of food to Primary day-schoolchildren (WFP 2012)

  • A total of 415 respondents; 27 head teachers, 108 teachers, 108 parents, 9 district planners 162 learners and 1 World Food Progamme (WFP) officer were asked to state the benefits of the school feeding programme

  • The study findings showed that all the 415 participants representing 100 percent acknowledged that school feeding programme had multiple benefits despite some noted operational challenges

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Summary

Introduction

School Feeding Programme (SFP) can be broadly defined as the provision of food to Primary day-schoolchildren (WFP 2012). It has been introduced in many developed and developing countries worldwide to address the issue of poverty, and to enhance the challenges of low school enrolment, attendance and poor academic performance among others (UNICEF 2005). According to United Nations’ World Food Programme (2010), in developing countries, almost 60 million children go to school hungry every day and about 40 percent of them in Africa. According to Bundy et al, (2009), the dissimilarity on purpose is determined by the need, resources and policies in the given country context

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