What do you think of your school meals?

- Published
What do you think about the quality of your school dinners?
The government have said they will order a review to make sure that all school meals are healthy.
It comes as the Education Minister, Bridget Phillipson, announced the government's plans to give more children free school meals in England.
School meals must meet official food standards so that children have healthy, balanced diets, and are supposed to include things like fruit, veg and milk.
So we want to know how you feel about your school dinners? Are they tasty or terrible? Let us know in our vote and tell us your most, or least favourite things in the comments below.
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What have the government announced?

The government has announced that any child in England whose parents receive the benefit Universal Credit, will be able to claim free school meals from September 2026, regardless of how much they earn.
Currently, the rules in England state that a household must earn less than £7,400 a year to qualify.
Education Minister Bridget Phillipson told the BBC that ministers were "working as quickly as we can" on next year's plans to extend free school meals.
She said the changes to free school meals would save parents £500 a year and "lift 100,000 children out of poverty".
The government has also said they would give £13 million to a number of food charities across England to "fight food poverty" and said there will be a review of standards so that school meals are healthy.
They say the change will help 500,000 more pupils, with Prime Minister Keir Starmer saying it would "help families who need it most".
The announcement has been largely welcomed by organisations campaigning against child poverty although school leaders group added there was "much more to be done".
Who currently gets free school meals?

Children's eligibility for free school meals varies across the UK.
All primary school children in London, and in Wales, can access free meals.
In Scotland, all children in the first five years of primary school are eligible, as well as all children from families receiving the Scottish Child Payment benefit.
Parents in Northern Ireland, can apply if they receive certain benefits and are below an income threshold which is approximately double the current England level, at £15,000.