Food for Thought
Objectives
- To increase students' knowledge about good nutrition.
- To encourage students to make good food choices.
Presenting the Activity
Distribute a copy of Activity One to each student. Read
the introduction as a class and ask students how much they
feel they already know about food. Review the directions
and give students time to complete the quiz individually.
When all students have completed the quiz, go over each
statement asking students to share their responses and discussing
the answers.
Answers
- Eating a variety of foods each day will provide
you with the nutrients your body needs.
Agree. Choosing a variety of foods within and across
food groups improves diet because different foods, even
within the same food group, have different combinations
of nutrients and other beneficial substances. For example,
some vegetables and fruits might be good sources of vitamin
C or vitamin A, while others are good sources of calcium
or iron.
- Foods from the grain group, along with fruits and
vegetables, are the foundation of a healthy diet.
Agree. Grain products, vegetables and fruits are an
important part of a varied diet. They provide vitamins,
minerals, complex carbohydrates and other substances that
are important to good health.
- Olives can be used in a variety of ways.
Agree. California Black Ripe Olives are often enjoyed
plain as a snack and are also used in salads, on pizza,
in sandwiches and in main dishes.
- The five-a-day rule means you should eat five times
a day.
Disagree. This rule means you should eat five servings
of vegetables or fruits each day. You can combine the
two: three servings of vegetables and two of fruit, or
four of fruit and one vegetable.
- Strawberry-flavored gum counts as a fruit.
Disagree. Some gums and snacks have artificial flavorings
added to them for taste. They do not contain the nutrients
found in the real fruit.
- Olives are a fruit.
Agree. Olives grow on trees. They are harvested in
the fall as the fruits mature. When olives are picked
from the tree they are green and very bitter tasting.
They must go through a curing process before they can
be eaten. The California Black Ripe Olive is processed
in a curing solution that leaches the bitterness out,
giving the olive its firm texture and smooth, mellow taste.
The olives then go through several cold water rinses to
remove all traces of the curing solution. During these
rinses, a flow of air bubbling through the olives produces
their natural, rich dark color.
- Water is not a nutrient.
Disagree. Water is the most important nutrient. It
is needed to carry out chemical processes within the body,
to carry waste products away and to cool the body.
- The body gets calories from carbohydrates, fats
and proteins.
Agree. The body requires large quantities of these
nutrients because they provide us with energy - the fuel
to run our bodies.
- Olives are low in calories.
Agree. The California Black Ripe Olive is low in calories.
It ranges from 4 calories in small olives to 12 calories
in the super colossal size.
- Fats found in foods are all the same.
Disagree. Fats found in various foods are not all
the same. Some fats are saturated, while others are unsaturated.
Too much saturated fat can cause health problems, but
unsaturated fat, in moderation, can be beneficial.
- Some dietary fat is needed for good health and taste.
Agree. Dietary fat is needed to help absorb and use
fat-soluble vitamins, nutrients and essential fatty acids.
It also helps bring flavor to foods we enjoy.
- Most American diets contain too much fat.
Agree. Fat often makes up about 40 percent of the
total calories consumed each day by most people. Most
doctors and experts recommend limiting fat to about 30
percent of daily calories.
Follow-Up Activities
- With the class, tally the answers for each statement,
make a table to show the number of correct and incorrect
answers for each and then convert the information into
a bar graph. Encourage students to share their observations.
You might want them to repeat this quiz when you have
completed the program and compare the results.
- Have students meet in small groups to talk about the
kinds of snacks they normally eat. They can make a list
of the snacks and brainstorm about what the nutritional
content might be. They should bring in the nutrition labels
from some of these snacks for future reference.
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