1 / 7

Cultural Diversity and the Food Pyramid

Cultural Diversity and the Food Pyramid . Whitney Connelly and Maria Dixon Ed200 Curriculum Project Spring ‘06 Trinity College. Introduction. Geared toward a primarily Puerto Rican 2 nd Grade Class Similar to our own classroom experiences M.D. Fox Elementary School. Objectives.

gage
Download Presentation

Cultural Diversity and the Food Pyramid

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Cultural Diversity and the Food Pyramid Whitney Connelly and Maria Dixon Ed200 Curriculum Project Spring ‘06 Trinity College

  2. Introduction • Geared toward a primarily Puerto Rican 2nd Grade Class • Similar to our own classroom experiences • M.D. Fox Elementary School

  3. Objectives • Students will learn how to interact and compromise in decision making in a group setting, encouraging interpersonal relationships. • Students will learn about the food pyramid to recognize ethnic foods as part of the food pyramid, and to regard these food as an important part of American nutrition. • Students will be encouraged to think more critically about everyday food choices through a series of intrapersonal evaluation and create a graph interpreting their daily food choices. • The students will enhance their logical-mathematical skills through a series of lessons and activities applying currency counting.

  4. Justification • To fulfill the Health and Safety Education Standard One in the CT Framework, students will establish and maintain healthy eating patterns and a physically active life. • According to the CT Framework standards on Health and Nutrition Education, students will plan, select, and prepare a nutritious meal based on the U.S. dietary guidelines. • To fulfill the economic standards in the CT Framework, students will demonstrate that various economic systems coexist, and that economic decisions are made by individuals and/or governments, influenced by markets, cultural traditions, individuals and governments in the allocation of goods and services. • We choose to focus on the Food Pyramid because it is a meaningful part of everyday life and the children are at a critical age to think more deeply about it.

  5. Weekly Log

  6. Tuesday • Students will use intrapersonal reflection to brainstorm a list of foods they typically eat • We will then present them with a food pyramid consistent with typical Puerto Rican cuisine • Students will then apply their understanding of the food pyramid to their own food logs which they kept over the weekend • They will fill in a graph of each food group according to the amount of servings they ate from each category

  7. Evaluation • On the sixth day, students will participate in a market. They will have to fill out a worksheet detailing the items they buy. Each student will have to buy one item from each food group, and will have to add up the price of their purchases.

More Related