Swinburne
Browse

The silent death of food technology rigor in school curriculum

Download (250.25 kB)
conference contribution
posted on 2024-07-09, 21:46 authored by Angela Turner, Kurt Seemann
There is a major concern in the world supply of food (Martin, 2007; World Health Organization, 2008). The main response to this world problem is more likely to come from food science and technology innovation, rather than from food hospitality skilling. In acknowledging the scale of this very real issue, we need to ask, are we getting intoxicated with the skills rhetoric given that the social, environmental and technical world students face is increasingly complex, and involves systems whose interactions are difficult to predict? An emerging concern throughout some states is a politically driven lack-lustre vision that fosters a comfort zone for what is thought to be the study of food technology. There is a need to critique the associations between teaching practice, syllabi design (particularly as a continuum of learning) and design as a problem-solving platform. Where once curriculum was written as the instrument of social and knowledge reform for the benefit of the student, it now appears to be the instrument of convenience for the benefit of social reproduction and a highly filtered view of the external world students will face. With the emerging links between climate and technological choices, there is cause to question how well a ‘no change decree’ by Food Technology syllabus custodians remains adequate in curriculum presentation and representation in schooling. This paper will focus around the area of food technology, and given its confusion with the field called food hospitality, the paper seeks to make a contribution to the issues around skills and innovation. While discussion centres on the Australian context, the study of food technology and science (and its confusion with back-of-house hospitality studies) has international relevance in education, particularly given the challenges of feeding the world and developing innovative new food products and production methods.

History

Available versions

PDF (Accepted manuscript)

Journal title

Proceedings of 'Exploring Technology Education: Solutions to issues in a Globalised World', the 5th International Technology Education Research Centre (TERC 2008)

Conference name

'Exploring Technology Education: Solutions to issues in a Globalised World', the 5th International Technology Education Research Centre TERC 2008

Volume

2

Publisher

Griffith University

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2008 Angela Turner and Kurt Seemann. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher.

Language

eng

Usage metrics

    Publications

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC