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Bayard

(25,323 posts)
Wed May 28, 2025, 10:41 PM Wednesday

Forty percent of kids in a U.S. study thought bacon was a plant

The majority believed that cows (77 percent), pigs (73 percent), and chickens (65 percent) are inedible.

A study has found that a significant percentage of 4 to 7-year-old children from the United States believe hotdogs, hamburgers, and bacon come from plants. Spoiler: they're not.

Published in the Journal of Environmental Psychology in 2021, the study involved a team of psychologists who asked 176 children from a southeastern metropolitan area in the US to categorize a variety of foods, including cheese, French fries, bacon, popcorn, shrimp, almonds, and eggs. The responses threw up a number of surprises, including that 47 percent of the participants believed that French fries came from animals. Cheese was commonly misidentified as plant-based, with 44 percent incorrectly identifying its origin. Around 41 percent believed bacon came from a plant (we wish) and 40 percent said the same of hot dogs. Even chicken nuggets, which famously have chicken in their name, were misidentified as coming from plants 38 percent of the time. "Popcorn and almonds were also commonly misclassified [as animal-based], each by more than 30% of children," the team write in their report.

As well as assessing the children's knowledge of the origins of foods, the team looked at what animals and plants the kids believed could and couldn't be eaten. It appears that there is a lot of confusion about what is and isn't edible, with the majority believing that cows (77 percent), pigs (73 percent), and chicken (65 percent) are inedible. Sand was considered edible by 1 percent, five times less than the amount who believed cat to be a type of food. The study shows that there are a lot of misconceptions around food at this early age – but the team believes it could be an opportunity. "Most children in the United States eat animal products, but unlike adults who have built up an arsenal of strategies to justify the consumption of animals, children appear to be naïve meat eaters," the team wrote in their discussion.

"The current study suggests that children eat meat unknowingly, and perhaps in violation of a bias against animals as a food source. Childhood may therefore represent a unique window of opportunity during which lifelong plant-based diets can be more easily established compared to later in life," they added. The team believes that part of the poor knowledge could be due to parents withholding knowledge about where meat comes from, believing it to be too gruesome for children to learn at such a young age. "Rather than manage the inconvenience of cooking several meal options or confront the emotions that may come with the revelation that the bacon on their child's plate was once a living, breathing pig, some parents instead skirt the truth altogether through vague terminology that has potentially lasting impacts on children's eating habits."

By being more open about the source of foods (i.e. telling kids how the sausage was made), and providing more meat alternatives, the team believes children may gravitate naturally towards plant-based foods. "At the family level, youth climate activism may begin at the dinner table," the team writes. "By refraining from eating foods that violate their beliefs about the well-being of animals, children would also be acting in a manner consistent with their moral views of the environment. In addition to reducing their own carbon footprints, children's principled eating behaviors may also influence those of their parents."

https://www.iflscience.com/over-40-percent-of-kids-in-a-us-study-thought-bacon-was-a-plant-79344


4 to 7 yr old's also still believe in Santa and the Tooth Fairy, but I would hope they get into a health class in grade school.

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dweller

(26,626 posts)
1. I expect
Wed May 28, 2025, 10:49 PM
Wednesday

Any further studies of this sort to be quashed by the Pisswig and BobKjr very soon .

✌🏻

unblock

(55,177 posts)
2. He *was* a plant! The fbi put him in central roles in those movies to spy on Hollywood!
Wed May 28, 2025, 10:53 PM
Wednesday

NoMoreRepugs

(11,362 posts)
3. Most could probably operate an iPad or tablet and negotiate any
Wed May 28, 2025, 10:54 PM
Wednesday

number of apps on an IPhone. Scary that “chicken” nuggets come from a plant.

dixiegrrrrl

(60,046 posts)
5. I knew an 11 year old boy who was amazed when I made waffles.
Wed May 28, 2025, 11:05 PM
Wednesday

He only knew storebought frozen waffles and pancakes.
Also had no idea carrots grew in the ground.Apparently frozen veggies were his only reality.
And that was in 1980.

Attilatheblond

(6,038 posts)
7. Newlywed back in early 70s, asked husband (a grown man, theoretically) if he would like pancakes one morning.
Wed May 28, 2025, 11:17 PM
Wednesday

He was enthusiastic about the idea and stepped into kitchen, opening one cupboard after another and was disappointed. "We can't have pancakes. There is no mix!"

Me, with my flour and other ingredients out "I don't use mix. I make pancakes"

Him: "no, you have to have mix!"

Me, getting a bit worried about the new spouse's level of knowledge: "How do you think the pioneers, crossing the country in wagons, made pancakes on their travels?"

Swear to the gods and dogs, he replied: "I figured they brought mix!"

Yeah, his mom wasn't much of a cook. Took me years to get him to eat a healthy variety of veggies as he hated them, having only had canned or extremely overcooked mushy veggies.

One more reason I advocate for every school in the nation to have a garden where kids get age appropriate science lessons via hands on growing and cooking vegetables.

appmanga

(1,146 posts)
6. C'mon now...
Wed May 28, 2025, 11:05 PM
Wednesday

...with the educational issues we have in this country surrounding basic spelling, math, civics, and science, should we really be concerned about where four-year olds think bacon comes from? Thanks goodness you can get your kid that age to be non-picky.

tishaLA

(14,638 posts)
10. It's easy to use agriculture as a method of teaching those things
Thu May 29, 2025, 06:42 AM
Thursday

Depending on the grade level, you can use potatoes or tomatoes to talk about colonialism and the conquest of the Americas. For civics, we can talk about farm bills and things like SNAP and how the legislative process effects our everyday lives (and diets). WRT science, agriculture is a fantastic way of teaching about things like photosynthesis, the structure and importance of carbohydrates, and so much more.

I honestly feel that a garden should be an essential part of American education from grade 1-12 with lessons shaped to fit grade level and student input.

Figarosmom

(5,987 posts)
8. Well I'm glad they were between 4-7 year olds
Thu May 29, 2025, 12:16 AM
Thursday

And not teens or young adults. I was afraid it was going to br 20 somethings.


I guess maybe they aren't taught at that age because it would seem gruesome. I can just see it. " little Johnny what does a cow say? that's right. Moo, and then he's cut up into your hamburger." Or "little Susy, what does a pig say just before he's made into bacon? Yes Oink oink.

no_hypocrisy

(51,730 posts)
9. I suppose I could make allowances for kids who consume
Thu May 29, 2025, 05:17 AM
Thursday

Beyond Meat/Beef, Impossible, Chunk Plant-Based Steak, etc. that mimic the taste and texture of meat.

But how many of their families can afford such products?

UniqueUserName

(355 posts)
11. I wonder how the question was posed to the children.
Thu May 29, 2025, 01:02 PM
Thursday

The way it's presented I could imagine the kids might have been confused by the questions. When I clicked on your link, this was a bullet point listed:

• Most 6- and 7-year-olds classified chicken, cows, and pigs as not OK to eat.

I can see how depending on how the question was asked how a kid might say that chicken, cows, and pigs are not OK to eat. The kids might be imagining the question as if the animals can be eaten as presented. You can't eat an olive straight from the tree.

Similarly, if I was talking to a farmer and I casually say, "I'm hungry." If the farmer replies jokingly, "There's a cow right there." I might respond with, "I can't eat a cow. . ."

I have no idea the wording of the survey questions, but I could imagine that a 4 - 7 year old might take the question literally. ----But maybe they did ask clear questions.

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