Lessonplan 1 2
Lessonplan 1 2
Lessonplan 1 2
DATE:
Communications
develop more productive ways of working and solving problems individually and
collaboratively
enables students to focus on the task to be accomplished rather than on the technology
they are using to do the work
Students need to develop the knowledge, skills and behaviours to effectively present
information, ideas and opinions in a range of form.
LESSON PROCEDURE
Introduction/focusing activity (The lesson begins with this activity.)
TIME
Teacher
Learning Intention written on the board : Get students thinking
about impact that food has on their lives
Students
Class discussing what are the basic resources needed for humans to
survive:
Teacher/ students write resources on the board.
After several minutes, discuss which are essential and non-essential.
Guiding questions for students What is you were to be stranded on
an island
Teacher guides this to point out only Food water and health are
essential for survival
10 minutes
(Engage
Explain
Explore
Elaborat
e)
Lesson development
Teacher
Instruct student to make groups of 3 or 4 students for unit project
work.
Student
Student group themselves and arrange
seating as require.
5 minutes
10 minutes
10 minutes
Lesson Goal written on the board: select a food topic and the
format that the project will be presented to the class.
Groups can choose topics not listed in the unit guide. Provide student
with handout of guiding question for topic selection .(See Appendix A)
Student can present their project in a number of different formats but
it must include a digital component to their presentation. More time
(Explain
Elaborat
e)
(Explore
Elaborat
e)
Class presentation of Jamie Olivers TED Talk: Teach every child about
food. ( Transcript of presentation is attached see Appendix C)
20 minutes
(Engage)
https://www.ted.com/talks/jamie_oliver?language=en
Class Discussion on Jamie Oliver talk with a focus on sustainability.
Pose the following Question through Socrative of class discussion
Socrative: Is our Eating Lifestyle sustainable?
20 minutes
15 min
(Engage
Explore
Elaborat
e
Evaluate
)
(Explore
Elaborat
e
Evaluate
)
Closure (Options include: summarising or reflecting on the learning achievements/analysing errors; the presentation of
selected students work/preparation for future lesson/s etc.)
Teacher
Socrative online Quiz on Food and information presented in class. The
quiz included reflective questions on student learning ( Socrative Quiz
information attached Appendix B)
Student
Students complete online Question
(Evaluat
e)
Time
10 min
Adaptations/Differentiation
At this point the teacher checks each students progress and decides who needs reteaching, extension, and or independent practice. Beginning practicum: reflection,
Experienced practicum: in planning.
Assistance required :
Teacher makes sure that each group has a student who is capable and willing to
implement peer teaching in each group. The teacher will work closely with groups
the need additional guidance.
Extension (Extension is for students who need more challenge.)
Content knowledge: When selecting topics get student to outline further
investigations you expect them to undertake on how their topic will be impacted in
the future.
Digital Knowledge : Provide student with additional resource they could use for
presentation , such as creating web page with embedded technology or Prezi
presentations
Independent Practice Help outline the structure of the project.
Use peer
APPENDIX A
Questions to assist student with selecting food topic.
What do you want to learn about food?
How does your culture affect the food you eat?
Do we have enough food to feed the world?
Would you become a vegetarian to feed the world?
Is it OK to genetically modify food?
Would you eat Meat grown in a Lab?
Can you imagine printing your own dinner?
What can we learn from indigenous food?
How does you faith impact your food choices?
Is sugar the new Tabaco?
Why are food allergies on the rise?
How much food do you waste at home?
How much food do we waste as a community?
Should we grow food to feed livestock?
How does climate change impact the food we eat?
Super foods, are they really super?
Deforestation for food productions, what are the implications?
Do you have a moral obligation to select ethically produced food?
Is Palm oil destroying organa Tung habitations around the world?
Whats the biggest killer of Australians?
Salt, is it worse than sugar?
Do Diets work?
What is the future of food?
Is Halal, Kosher food Ethical?
Should Australia continue with the live trade business?
Should we supplement our nutrition with vitamins?
Should High energy drinks be banned?
Should Companies be allowed advertise high sugar product to kids?
Food labelling, what are the problems with the current system?
What are the issues associated with Low fat food?
Fat and Sugar addiction.
Diabetes and Food .
APPENDIX B
Socrative Quizz SOC-18422649
APPENDIX C
Jamie Oliver Transcript Teach every child about
food
00:11
Sadly, in the next 18 minutes when I do our chat, four Americans that are alive will be
dead through the food that they eat.
00:25
My name's Jamie Oliver. I'm 34 years old. I'm from Essex in England and for the last
seven years I've worked fairly tirelessly to save lives in my own way. I'm not a doctor;
I'm a chef, I don't have expensive equipment or medicine. I use information,
education.
00:50
I profoundly believe that the power of food has a primal place in our homes that binds
us to the best bits of life. We have an awful, awful reality right now. America, you're at
the top of your game. This is one of the most unhealthy countries in the world.
01:16
Can I please just see a raise of hands for how many of you have children in this room
today? Put your hands up. You can continue to put your hands up, aunties and uncles
as well. Most of you. OK. We, the adults of the last four generations, have blessed our
children with the destiny of a shorter lifespan than their own parents. Your child will
live a life ten years younger than you because of the landscape of food that we've
built around them. Two-thirds of this room, today, in America, are statistically
overweight or obese. You lot, you're all right, but we'll get you eventually, don't worry.
01:58
(Laughter)
01:59
The statistics of bad health are clear, very clear. We spend our lives being paranoid
about death, murder, homicide, you name it; it's on the front page of every paper,
CNN. Look at homicide at the bottom, for God's sake. Right?
02:16
(Laughter)
02:17
(Applause)
02:22
Every single one of those in the red is a diet-related disease. Any doctor, any
specialist will tell you that. Fact: diet-related disease is the biggest killer in the United
States, right now, here today. This is a global problem. It's a catastrophe. It's sweeping
the world. England is right behind you, as usual.
02:47
(Laughter)
02:51
I know they were close, but not that close. We need a revolution. Mexico, Australia,
Germany, India, China, all have massive problems of obesity and bad health. Think
about smoking. It costs way less than obesity now. Obesity costs you Americans 10
percent of your health-care bills, 150 billion dollars a year. In 10 years, it's set to
double: 300 billion dollars a year. Let's be honest, guys, you haven't got that cash.
03:23
(Laughter)
03:27
I came here to start a food revolution that I so profoundly believe in. We need it. The
time is now. We're in a tipping-point moment. I've been doing this for seven years. I've
been trying in America for seven years. Now is the time when it's ripe -- ripe for the
picking. I went to the eye of the storm. I went to West Virginia, the most unhealthy
state in America. Or it was last year. We've got a new one this year, but we'll work on
that next season.
03:55
(Laughter)
03:57
Huntington, West Virginia. Beautiful town. I wanted to put heart and soul and people,
your public, around the statistics that we've become so used to. I want to introduce
you to some of the people that I care about: your public, your children. I want to show
a picture of my friend Brittany. She's 16 years old. She's got six years to live because
of the food that she's eaten. She's the third generation of Americans that hasn't grown
up within a food environment where they've been taught to cook at home or in school,
or her mom, or her mom's mom. She has six years to live. She's eating her liver to
death.
04:39
Stacy, the Edwards family. This is a normal family, guys. Stacy does her best, but
she's third-generation as well; she was never taught to cook at home or at school. The
family's obese. Justin here, 12 years old, he's 350 pounds. He gets bullied, for God's
sake. The daughter there, Katie, she's four years old. She's obese before she even
gets to primary school. Marissa, she's all right, she's one of your lot. But you know
what? Her father, who was obese, died in her arms, And then the second most
important man in her life, her uncle, died of obesity, and now her step-dad is obese.
You see, the thing is, obesity and diet-related disease doesn't just hurt the people that
have it; it's all of their friends, families, brothers, sisters.
05:26
Pastor Steve: an inspirational man, one of my early allies in Huntington, West Virginia.
He's at the sharp knife-edge of this problem. He has to bury the people, OK? And he's
fed up with it. He's fed up with burying his friends, his family, his community. Come
winter, three times as many people die. He's sick of it. This is preventable disease.
Waste of life. By the way, this is what they get buried in. We're not geared up to do
this. Can't even get them out the door, and I'm being serious. Can't even get them
there. Forklift.
06:02
OK, I see it as a triangle, OK? This is our landscape of food. I need you to understand
it. You've probably heard all this before. Over the last 30 years, what's happened
that's ripped the heart out of this country? Let's be frank and honest. Well, modernday life.
06:18
Let's start with the Main Street. Fast food has taken over the whole country; we know
that. The big brands are some of the most important powers, powerful powers, in this
country.
06:29
(Sighs)
06:30
Supermarkets as well. Big companies. Big companies. Thirty years ago, most of the
food was largely local and largely fresh. Now it's largely processed and full of all sorts
of additives, extra ingredients, and you know the rest of the story. Portion size is
obviously a massive, massive problem. Labeling is a massive problem. The labeling in
this country is a disgrace. The industry wants to self-police themselves. What, in this
kind of climate? They don't deserve it. How can you say something is low-fat when it's
full of so much sugar?
07:09
Home. The biggest problem with the home is that used to be the heart of passing on
food culture, what made our society. That is not happening anymore. And you know,
as we go to work and as life changes, and as life always evolves, we kind of have to
look at it holistically -- step back for a moment, and re-address the balance. It hasn't
happened for 30 years, OK? I want to show you a situation that is very normal right
now; the Edwards family.
07:42
(Video) Jamie Oliver: Let's have a talk. This stuff goes through you and your family's
body every week. And I need you to know that this is going to kill your children early.
How are you feeling?
07:57
Stacy: Just feeling really sad and depressed right now. But, you know, I want my kids
to succeed in life and this isn't going to get them there. But I'm killing them.
08:10
JO: Yes you are. You are. But we can stop that. Normal. Let's get on schools, something
that I'm fairly much a specialist in. OK, school. What is school? Who invented it?
What's the purpose of school? School was always invented to arm us with the tools to
make us creative, do wonderful things, make us earn a living, etc., etc. You know, it's
been kind of in this sort of tight box for a long, long time, OK? But we haven't really
evolved it to deal with the health catastrophes of America, OK? School food is
something that most kids -- 31 million a day, actually -- have twice a day, more than
often, breakfast and lunch, 180 days of the year. So you could say that school food is
quite important, really, judging the circumstances.
09:06
(Laughter)
09:11
Before I crack into my rant, which I'm sure you're waiting for -09:15
(Laughter)
09:19
I need to say one thing, and it's so important in, hopefully, the magic that happens
and unfolds in the next three months. The lunch ladies, the lunch cooks of America -- I
offer myself as their ambassador. I'm not slagging them off. They're doing the best
they can do. They're doing their best. But they're doing what they're told, and what
they're being told to do is wrong. The system is highly run by accountants; there's not
enough, or any, food-knowledgeable people in the business. There's a problem: If
you're not a food expert, and you've got tight budgets and it's getting tighter, then
you can't be creative, you can't duck and dive and write different things around
things. If you're an accountant, and a box-ticker, the only thing you can do in these
circumstances is buy cheaper shit.
10:08
Now, the reality is, the food that your kids get every day is fast food, it's highly
processed, there's not enough fresh food in there at all. You know, the amount of
additives, E numbers, ingredients you wouldn't believe -- there's not enough veggies
at all. French fries are considered a vegetable. Pizza for breakfast. They don't even get
crockery. Knives and forks? No, they're too dangerous. They have scissors in the
classroom, but knives and forks? No. And the way I look at it is: If you don't have
knives and forks in your school, you're purely endorsing, from a state level, fast food,
because it's handheld. And yes, by the way, it is fast food: It's sloppy Joes, it's burgers,
it's wieners, it's pizzas, it's all of that stuff.
10:49
(Sighs)
10:51
Ten percent of what we spend on health care, as I said earlier, is on obesity, and it's
going to double. We're not teaching our kids. There's no statutory right to teach kids
about food, elementary or secondary school, OK? We don't teach kids about food,
right? And this is a little clip from an elementary school, which is very common in
England.
11:12
(Video) Who knows what this is?
11:14
Child: Potatoes.
11:15
Jamie Oliver: Potato? So, you think these are potatoes? Do you know what that is? Do
you know what that is?
11:20
Child: Broccoli?
11:22
JO: What about this? Our good old friend.
11:24
Child: Celery.
11:25
JO: No. What do you think this is?
11:27
Child: Onion. JO: Onion? No.
11:29
JO: Immediately you get a really clear sense of "Do the kids know anything about
where food comes from?" Who knows what that is? Child: Uh, pear?
11:36
JO: What do you think this is? Child: I don't know.
11:39
JO: If the kids don't know what stuff is, then they will never eat it.
11:44
(Laughter)
11:46
JO: Normal. England and America, England and America. Guess what fixed that. Two
one-hour sessions. We've got to start teaching our kids about food in schools, period.
12:00
(Applause)
12:05
I want to tell you about something that kind of epitomizes the trouble that we're in,
guys, OK? I want to talk about something so basic as milk. Every kid has the right to
milk at school. Your kids will be having milk at school, breakfast and lunch, right?
They'll be having two bottles, OK? And most kids do. But milk ain't good enough
anymore. Don't get me wrong, I support milk -- but someone at the milk board
probably paid a lot of money for some geezer to work out that if you put loads of
flavorings, colorings and sugar in milk, more kids will drink it. Yeah.
12:44
Obviously now that's going to catch on the apple board is going to work out that if
they make toffee apples they'll eat more as well. Do you know what I mean? For me,
there isn't any need to flavor the milk. Okay? There's sugar in everything. I know the
ins and outs of those ingredients. It's in everything. Even the milk hasn't escaped the
kind of modern-day problems. There's our milk. There's our carton. In that is nearly as
much sugar as one of your favorite cans of fizzy pop, and they are having two a day.
So, let me just show you. We've got one kid, here -- having, you know, eight
tablespoons of sugar a day. You know, there's your week. There's your month. And I've
taken the liberty of putting in just the five years of elementary school sugar, just from
milk. Now, I don't know about you guys, but judging the circumstances, right, any
judge in the whole world, would look at the statistics and the evidence, and they
would find any government of old guilty of child abuse. That's my belief.
13:56
(Applause)
14:03
(Applause ends)
14:04
Now, if I came up here, and I wish I could come up here today and hang a cure for
AIDS or cancer, you'd be fighting and scrambling to get to me. This, all this bad news,
is preventable. That's the good news. It's very, very preventable. So, let's just think
about, we got a problem here, we need to reboot. Okay so, in my world, what do we
need to do? Here is the thing, right, it cannot just come from one source. To reboot
and make real tangible change, real change, so that I could look you in the white of
the eyes and say, "In 10 years' time, the history of your children's lives, happiness -and let's not forget, you're clever if you eat well, you know you're going to live longer
-- all of that stuff, it will look different. OK?"
14:52
So, supermarkets. Where else do you shop so religiously? Week in, week out. How
much money do you spend, in your life, in a supermarket? Love them. They just sell us
what we want. All right. They owe us to put a food ambassador in every major
supermarket. They need to help us shop. They need to show us how to cook quick,
tasty, seasonal meals for people that are busy. This is not expensive. It is done in
some, and it needs to be done across the board in America soon, and quick. The big
brands, you know, the food brands, need to put food education at the heart of their
businesses. I know, easier said than done. It's the future. It's the only way.
15:33
Fast food. With the fast-food industry you know, it's very competitive. I've had loads of
secret papers and dealings with fast food restaurants. I know how they do it. I mean,
basically they've weaned us on to these hits of sugar, salt and fat, and x, y, and z, and
everyone loves them, right? So, these guys are going to be part of the solution. But
we need to get the government to work with all of the fast food purveyors and the
restaurant industry, and over a five, six, seven year period wean of us off the extreme
amounts of fat, sugar and all the other non-food ingredients.
16:08
Now, also, back to the sort of big brands: labeling, I said earlier, is an absolute farce
and has got to be sorted. OK, school. Obviously, in schools, we owe it to them to make
sure those 180 days of the year, from that little precious age of four, until 18, 20, 24,
whatever, they need to be cooked proper, fresh food from local growers on site, OK?
There needs to be a new standard of fresh, proper food for your children, yeah?
16:38
(Applause)
16:43
Under the circumstances, it's profoundly important that every single American child
leaves school knowing how to cook 10 recipes that will save their life. Life skills.
16:55
(Applause)
16:57
That means that they can be students, young parents, and be able to sort of duck and
dive around the basics of cooking, no matter what recession hits them next time. If
you can cook, recession money doesn't matter. If you can cook, time doesn't matter.
The workplace, we haven't really talked about it. You know, it's now time for corporate
responsibility to really look at what they feed or make available to their staff. The staff
are the moms and dads of America's children. Marissa, her father died in her hand, I
think she'd be quite happy if corporate America could start feeding their staff properly.
Definitely they shouldn't be left out. Let's go back to the home.
17:37
Now, look, if we do all this stuff, and we can, it's so achievable. You can care and be
commercial. Absolutely. But the home needs to start passing on cooking again, for
sure. For sure, pass it on as a philosophy. And for me, it's quite romantic, but it's about
if one person teaches three people how to cook something, and they teach three of
their mates, that only has to repeat itself 25 times, and that's the whole population of
America. Romantic, yes, but most importantly, it's about trying to get people to realize
that every one of your individual efforts makes a difference. We've got to put back
what's been lost. Huntington's Kitchen. Huntington, where I made this program, we've
got this prime-time program that hopefully will inspire people to really get on this
change. I truly believe that change will happen. Huntington's Kitchen. I work with a
community. I worked in the schools. I found local sustainable funding to get every
single school in the area from the junk, onto the fresh food: six-and-a-half grand per
school.
18:39
(Applause)
18:41
That's all it takes, six-and-a-half grand per school. The Kitchen is 25 grand a month.
Okay? This can do 5,000 people a year, which is 10 percent of their population, and
it's people on people. You know, it's local cooks teaching local people. It's free cooking
lessons, guys, in the Main Street. This is real, tangible change, real, tangible change.
Around America, if we just look back now, there is plenty of wonderful things going on.
There is plenty of beautiful things going on. There are angels around America doing
great things in schools -- farm-to-school set-ups, garden set-ups, education -- there
are amazing people doing this already. The problem is they all want to roll out what
they're doing to the next school, but there's no cash. We need to recognize the
experts and the angels quickly, identify them, and allow them to easily find the
resource to keep rolling out what they're already doing, and doing well. Businesses of
America need to support Mrs. Obama to do the things that she wants to do.
19:44
(Applause)
19:51
And look, I know it's weird having an English person standing here before you talking
about all this. All I can say is: I care. I'm a father, and I love this country. And I believe
truly, actually, that if change can be made in this country, beautiful things will happen
around the world. If America does it, other people will follow. It's incredibly important.
20:14
(Audience) Yeah!
20:15
(Applause)
20:21
When I was in Huntington, trying to get a few things to work when they weren't, I
thought "If I had a magic wand, what would I do?" And I thought, "You know what? I'd
just love to be put in front of some of the most amazing movers and shakers in
America." And a month later, TED phoned me up and gave me this award. I'm here.
So, my wish. Dyslexic, so I'm a bit slow. My wish is for you to help a strong,
sustainable movement to educate every child about food, to inspire families to cook
again, and to empower people everywhere to fight obesity.