Target Learner:
Webquest designed for students enrolled in Food Studies 10 and 30. There are no prerequisites for either of the Foods classes, so this webquest could be used in either class.
Specific reference to the Saskatchewan Education Curriculum guide:
The webquest would be used in Module 2- Kitchen and Food Safety. The link to the Sask Ed guide is http://www.sasklearning.gov.sk.ca/docs/paa/foodst/1_2.html#2
Concept map:
Question for the students:
Why is food safety an important issue? Why are safe kitchen practices important?
What procedures and practices are needed to ensure food and kitchen safety?
Rationale:
This is probably the most important part of the Food Studies area. Improperly cooked food and improper food handling can cause serious illness and even death.
The webquest will involve researching specific websites and finding the information needed to safely set up and maintain a home or commercial kitchen. This information can, and will at some point transfer to real world application, either when the student leaves home to live on their own, or if at some point they work in a commercial food establishment.
Teaching Activities:
Part One:
- Define food safety terms
- Create a chart with the food groups/types of contamination or food born illness/effects from contamination or food borne illness/ prevention of contamination or food born illness
Part Two:
- Create a chart with common kitchen hazards / prevention / first aid treatments
Part Three:
-Take the food safety quiz
- play 2 food safe games given online
Part Four:
-Design a simple kitchen (free hand or with software if available) that meets all of the food and kitchen safety goals.
-Write a short report detailing where foods / equipment/ hazardous good wills be stored (detailing exact locations in with in the fridge/freezer eg: top shelf, middle shelf: bottom shelf) justify your reasoning using the data collected for your charts
Resources:
Computer/Internet
Food safety quiz
Some of the websites that the students will access for this quest are
The Canadian food inspection agency: food borne illness, http://www.inspection.gc.ca/
and kitchen safety, http://www.inspection.gc.ca/english/fssa/concen/tipcon/kitchene.shtml
Health Canada – In your kitchen: safe food handling tips, food related illness
http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/securit/index-eng.php
Canadian partnership for consumer food safety education http://www.canfightbac.org/en/
http://www.babycenter.ca/baby/safety/kitchensafety/
http://www.foodnetwork.ca/guides/entertaining/kitchen+safety+tips/2177740/story.html
http://www.fsafood.com/fsacom/News+and+Information/Solutions/Operations/Kitchen+Safety.htm
Evaluation:
Part One: Food Safety
Definitions – one mark for each right answer
Food safe chart - based on rubric
Part Two: Kitchen safety
Kitchen safe chart - based on rubric
Part Three:
Food safety quiz – one mark for each right answer
Kitchen design - based on rubric
Kitchen design report - based on rubric

Jay
ReplyDeleteI am still working on the rubrics, as I am still flushing out the content of the quest... I will get them to you soon.
This is much more comprehensive. An excellent plan and a great idea for making it happen. 9 out of 10.
ReplyDelete