WASHINGTON—Corporate-school partnerships bolster corporate profits at the expense of kids’ health and education, according to the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), which today blasted a Coca-Cola-funded report encouraging such partnerships. The report was issued by a group called the Council for Corporate-School Partnerships, which was founded by Coca-Cola.
“Imagine our surprise that this front group found that these partnerships ‘add value’ to schools,” CSPI executive director Michael F. Jacobson said. “But given the Coca-Cola company’s horrible track record in schools, it’s the last company one should look to for ‘guiding principles’ in this area. Coke ‘partners’ with schools in the same way that foxes ‘partner’ with hen houses.”
According to CSPI, examples of improper corporate-school partnerships include:
The report claims that business-school partnerships should “compliment [sic] the social values and goals of the school, business partner, and the community.” But the report comes as communities are increasingly trying to remove junk foods from schools. Recently, the Los Angeles Unified School District banned sales of soda pop on school grounds.
“Parents should be outraged and should throw the corporate teachers out of the classroom,” Jacobson said. “We don't need ExxonMobil teaching kids about pollution and global warming, and we certainly don’t need Coca-Cola teaching kids nutrition.”
Recently, CSPI launched Smart-Mouth.org, a web site designed to get kids interested about healthy eating, and to help kids (and parents and teachers) see through the marketing tactics of the food industry.
For more information, contact: Center for Science in the Public Interest