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It's time to study values at the core of food technology education

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-07-11, 17:24 authored by Angela Turner, Kurt Seemann
This paper seeks to explore the values of academic culture in the secondary teaching genre of Food Technology. Historically, education providers have displayed a traditional syllabus design and interpretation of the Food Technology industry. This paper argues that the NSW Food Technology Syllabi has largely been a re-badging of the former home economics/domestic science curriculum and warrants a new perspective. New societal values have influenced innovation in food products, from valuing indigenous bush harvest, links between naturopathy and food, and strengthening values that link eco-sustainability with synthetic foods. These new developments present a compelling case to rethink the future and content of food technology in schooling. It requires a new theoretical framework to accommodate the new understanding now evident in the subject matter as it now occurs “beyond the school gate” in the wider global economy. A key feature of this paper asserts that food technology education is overdue for a rethink that involves searching for a new coherent framework that can articulate both a core place for the study of values and a place for emerging knowledges with particular regard to innovation. The paper explores the merits of technacy and innovation theories that when combined, creates a powerful and unifying method for both affective and cognitive learning and assessment for guiding skill and practice.

History

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISBN

9781921291104

Conference name

Values in Technology Education, the 4th Biennial International Conference on Technology Education, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, 07-09 December 2006

Volume

1

Pagination

10 pp

Publisher

Griffith University

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2006 Angela Turner and Kurt Seemann. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

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