Cooking
The Books: Food On The Syllabus
Cookery, food and nutrition, home economics or domestic science - whatever
you call it, many parents wonder where it's gone.
Learning
about food and drink isn't a compulsory component of the National Curriculum
but you may be surprised to realise how often 'food technology' as it's
now known, turns up in the classroom.
A
piece of cake!
During Key Stage 1, 5-to-7 yr-olds are taught to look at familiar things
in an inquisitive way, working out how they're made and what makes them
tick. Planning, choosing and using the proper equipment safely, and getting
the right materials together may sound daunting but making fairy cakes
fulfils all these Design & Technology requirements and more.
Alive,
alive-o!
Turning milk into yoghurt demonstrates the way bacteria works for 7-to-11
yr-olds in Key Stage 2 Science, and leads on to important questions like
why kill off the bacteria in the milk first, and what kind of thing useful
bacteria eat. Finding out about healthy eating and a balanced diet is
a key part of the life processes and living things element.
Schools
encourage children to sort fruit and vegetables, bread and cereals, and
cheese, meat and fish in to food groups. The physics of cookery encourages
your child to use existing knowledge about which states are permanent
(e.g. melted chocolate sets again but a fried egg stays cooked) to predict
whether other changes can be reversed.
Using
your loaf
In Key Stage 3 Design & Technology, 11-14 year-olds use their skills to
design and make proper, working products - including food! The DfES website
gives the example of a project about researching and designing a new kind
of loaf, where pupils make bread using traditional ingredients, compare
the results from a ready-made bread mix, and finally, after research into
mass food production, plan a small batch production method.
Key
Stage 3 scientists study the chemical reactions in cooking - like how
does toast burn - and how these reactions affect materials and their properties.
Many students investigate the energy values of food as part of learning
scientific enquiry techniques.
Taking it further...
At Key Stage 4, 14-to-16 year-olds have
the option to choose Domestic Science or Food and Nutrition as one of
their non-compulsory GCSE topics. As to drink, the effects of alcohol
on health are covered in PSHE but other than that there are some areas
of teenage life where the National Curriculum fears to tread.
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