Improving the nutritional status of children in classes I-V
Encouraging poor children, belonging to disadvantaged sections, to attend school more regularly and help them concentrate on classroom activities
Providing nutritional support to children of primary stage in drought affected areas during su...
Improving the nutritional status of children in classes I-V
Encouraging poor children, belonging to disadvantaged sections, to attend school more regularly and help them concentrate on classroom activities
Providing nutritional support to children of primary stage in drought affected areas during summer vacation
(To achieve the above objectives a cooked mid day meal with nutritional content will be provided to all children studying in classes I-V)
Size: 394.71 KB
Language: en
Added: Sep 24, 2015
Slides: 12 pages
Slide Content
The objective of Mid Day Meal Scheme
I.Improving the nutritional status of children in classes I-V
II.Encouraging poor children, belonging to disadvantaged sections, to attend
school more regularly and help them concentrate on classroom activities
III.Providing nutritional support to children of primary stage in drought
affected areas during summer vacation
(To achieve the above objectives a cooked mid day meal with
nutritional content will be provided to all children
studying in classes I-V)
Which are the institutions/schools eligible for Mid Day
Meal
Government, Govt. Aided, Local Body, EGS and AIE Centres,
Madarsa and Maqtabs supported under Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan
and National Child Labour Project (NCLP) Schools run by Ministry
of Labour.
3
Some key information
Free supply of food grains @ 100 grams per child per school day at
Primary and @ 150 grams per child per school day at Upper Primary.
For children in classes I – V, a meal with a nutritional value of 450
calories and 12 grams of protein
For children in upper primary classes, a meal containing of 700
calories and 20 grams of protein
In addition to rice/chapattis, the meal includes pulses, vegetables
depending upon local availability
4
Some key information
Sl. Items
Quantity per day/Child
PrimaryUpper Primary
1Food-grains 100 gr 150 gr
2Pulses 20 gr 30 gr
3Vegetables (leafy also)50 gr 75 gr
4Oil & fat 5 gr 7.5 gr
5Salt & condimentsAs per needAs per need
5
Revised Cooking cost per child per school day
Stage Total
Cost
Central-State Sharing
Non-NER States
(75:25)
NER-State (90:10)
CentralState CentralState
PrimaryRs.3.76Rs.2.82Rs.0.94Rs.3.38Rs.0.38
Upper
Primary
Rs. 5.64Rs. 4.23Rs. 1.41Rs. 5.08Rs. 0.56
Some key information
6
How many days Mid Day Meal is served?
Mid Day Meal is served on all working days
in the school
There is provision to provide mid day meal to
children in summer vacations in drought
affected areas
7
Provision for Kitchen devices per school
There is provision to provide 100% Central
assistance @ Rs. 5000 per school for procurement
of kitchen devices
Cooking devices (Stove, Chulha, etc)
Containers for storage of food grains and
other ingredients
Utensils for cooking and serving
8
Some key information
Rs.100 per quintal for 11 special category States viz. Arunachal
Pradesh, Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Manipur, Nagaland, Tripura,
Sikkim, J&K, Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand and Rs.75 per quintal
for all other States and Uts
Cost of cooking and cost for engaging a cook/assistant
@Rs.1000/month
The norm for engagement of cook-cum-helper is one cook-cum-helper
in a school having upto 25 students, two cooks-cum-helpers for schools
having 26 to 100 students, and one additional cook-cum-helper for every
addition of upto 100 students
The scheme has provision for construction of kitchen cum store in every
school where land is available. The norm for construction of kitchen cum
store is- 20 sq. mt. plinth area for construction of Kitchen-cum- store in
schools having upto 100 children
Central Assistance towards construction of kitchen shed-cum-Stores @
Rs. 60,000 per unit
9
Provision of assistance for cooking cost at the following rates :
States in North-Eastern Region: @ Rs.1.80per child per school day provided
the State Govt. contributes a minimum of 20 paise.
For other States & UTs : @ Rs.1.50 per child per school day provided the
State Govt./UT administration contributes a minimum of 50- paise.
Some key information
10
Role of community ……….
The community has an important role in monitoring and implementation of
the scheme. The community can monitor the scheme on a daily roster
basis. Representatives of Gram Panchayats/Gram Sabhas (or such as
Village Council) equivalent, Parent Teacher Associations, etc. can monitor
on regular/daily basis in terms of:
Regularity of the MDM
Cleanliness in cooking and serving
Timeliness for procuring good quality ingredients, fuel, etc.
Variety of menu
Social and gender equity
11
Display in school
The school has to display the menu (on the notice board or on school wall,
etc.). Along with this, schools are also expected to display the following;
Quantity of food grains received, date of receipt
Quantity of food grains used
Other ingredients purchased and used
Number of children who received MDM
Daily Menu
Roster of Community Members