Food & Nutrition - Year 13

Food & Nutrition Overview

Term 1, 2, 3: Unit 2 - Ensuring food is safe to eat

Students will learn the physiological basis for food poisoning and food intolerances. This unit also covers how to prevent pathogens from growing and methods of food preservation.

  1. This is an external assessment task undertaken in school in controlled conditions.
Micro-organisms

Tiny forms of life, both plants and animals, only visible under a microscope

Food spoilage

Making food unfit and unsafe to eat

Contaminate

make a food unsafe to eat by allowing it to come into contact with micro-organisms that will grow and multiply in it.

Pathogenic

Something that is capable of causing illness.

Food poisoning

An illness caused by micro-organisms contaminating food.

High-risk foods

Foods that contain a lot of moisture and nutrients, especially protein (e.g. milk, cream, eggs, meat, fish), and easily support the growth of pathogenic micro-organisms, particularly bacteria. Also called perishable foods

  • Spiritual
  • Moral
  • Social
  • Cultural
Develop the individual:

They will learn how to prepare food that is safe to eat.

Create a supportive community:

Term 4,5,6: Unit 4 - Current issues in food science and nutrition

Current issues in food science and nutrition

  1. Students have to write on a chosen topic that interests them in food science and nutrition. They will be assessed on the quality of their research and how it is written up over 14 hours in controlled conditions.
Climate change

Changes in the earth’s temperature that can lead to unusual and extreme weather conditions.

Genetic modification (GM)

A scientific technique that enables a particular characteristic from one plant of animal to be inserted into the genes of another.

Greenhouse gases

An insulating layer around the earth’s atmosphere, which traps heat and raises the earth’s temperature.

Gathered ingredients

Plant foods gathered from the wild for eating (e.g. herb, edible fungi, berries, seaweed).

Carbon footprint

A measure of the contribution of something (e.g. food production) to the emission of greenhouse gases.

  • Spiritual
  • Moral
  • Social
  • Cultural
Develop the individual:

Create a supportive community: