管家婆免费开奖大全

鈥淔or a lot of people, when they hear about issues like climate change, they鈥檙e just overwhelmed, and it鈥檚 paralyzing,鈥 Stahlbrand says. 鈥淚 think that food is one of the ways that can really give people hope.鈥 (all photos by Johnny Guatto)

Food Matters: this New College course encourages students to snack in class

鈥淢y hope is that I can help students make connections between what they eat and what is happening in the world around them鈥

Most professors aren鈥檛 too keen on students eating in class, but the 管家婆免费开奖大全's Lori Stahlbrand positively encourages it. In fact, every week she hands around food 鈥 sometimes treats that she鈥檚 made herself 鈥 to the students in her first-year Food Matters class.

Stahlbrand is a lecturer in the New College New One: Learning Without Borders program. She鈥檚 also the interim coordinator of the program, which includes three other courses: Travelling Words 鈥 Language and Diversity, Digital Technology in Society, and Arts and Community. The courses explore the themes of globalization and citizen engagement and build research and writing skills, Stahlbrand says. Like all of 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 One programs, each course has at most 25 students who meet for two to three hours each week where they present papers, listen to guest speakers and, for Stahlbrand鈥檚 lucky students, sample treats made from the foods under discussion.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the International Year of Pulses,鈥 Stahlbrand says as she passed around a tray of gluten-free brownies made from ground-up Romano beans. 鈥淐an any of you tell us about dishes made from pulses that you grew up with?鈥

A couple of students from South Asia mention dhal, students from Brazil and Mexico reminisce about rice and bean dishes, and a student from the Middle East describes how hummus is made. Their classmates munch on the brownies and examine the samples of lentils and chickpeas that Stahlbrand is also handing around. Pulse, Stahlbrand tells us, comes from the Latin word puls, meaning thick soup or porridge.

Stahlbrand then switches topics. 鈥淚 want to tell you about some very significant news. For the past 10 years, Aramark 鈥 one of the biggest food companies in the world, has handled food services at 管家婆免费开奖大全. But the university has made the decision not to renew the contract and to take over food services itself. That means that as of September, if you鈥檙e in residence or if you go to Robarts or Sid Smith or Gerstein, the food that you will be eating will be managed and prepared by staff and chefs who work for 管家婆免费开奖大全 and not for an outside contractor. This has big significance because it鈥檚 the largest university to have done this as far as we know anywhere in North America.鈥

 

Each class is organized around a particular issue, such as food and hunger, food and waste, genetic engineering, or the environmental impact of growing food, Stahlbrand says. In the first semester of the course, students keep a food diary, recording everything they eat or drink for one day each week. The second semester is devoted to the preparation and writing of an academic research paper, with a celebration at the end of the year, Stahlbrand says. Students also take field trips to Kensington Market or local food processors such as ChocoSol Traders or listen to guest speakers from the community.

The students come to the course for a variety of reasons, she says. 鈥淚t ranges from people who just like to eat and think it sounds interesting to take a course about food, to student athletes who want to find out more about the connection between food and health, to people who have worked as bakers or volunteered on farms to people who have been food security activists since high school.鈥

First-year life science student Gabriella Burt-D鈥橝gnillo, for example, hopes to major in nutritional science. Her favourite part of this course, she says, 鈥渋s how it uses the central idea of 鈥榯he food system鈥 to branch off into different topics for each class discussion. I particularly enjoyed watching the film King Corn, and learning about the abundance of corn and its uses in the food system today.鈥

photo of students in the class with chips and dip

Besides teaching in the New One program, Stahlbrand also has a part-time appointment as New College鈥檚 food equity coordinator. In that role, she connects faculty, students and the community through food, develops food-related programming and liaises with community groups on food issues. 鈥淢y hope is that I can help students make connections between what they eat and what is happening in the world around them.鈥

Burt-D鈥橝gnillo agrees. 鈥淟ori is always prepared to help her students, and she is a great resource for discussing topics that even reach outside the course material.鈥

Stahlbrand鈥檚 connection with food comes naturally. 鈥淔ood has always been important in my life. My parents always had a garden,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淭here are stories in my family of how my aunt farmed the empty lot next to their house and grew enough food to help them get through the Depression. My own parents were among the original health food enthusiasts back in the 1950s.鈥

The former CBC Radio journalist has long been involved in food politics. Along with Rod MacRae, she and her husband, Wayne Roberts, co-authored the book, Real Food for Change in 1999. She鈥檚 also founder and former president of Local Food Plus and is faculty advisor to the new 管家婆免费开奖大全 Food Policy Council.

Food, she says, is one of the few areas in which we can affect real change.

鈥淔or a lot of people, when they hear about issues like climate change, they鈥檙e just overwhelmed, and it鈥檚 paralyzing. I think that food is one of the ways that can really give people hope and I鈥檓 very excited about working in an area that鈥檚 hopeful and positive.

鈥淎nd delicious.鈥

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