3 Nutrition

How This Section Contests an Existing Proprietary Textbook

This OER creation contests the approach of a proprietary textbook by incorporating culturally relevant pedagogy and rejecting deficit mindset. The section includes a quote from the publisher textbook “Nutrition: Concepts & Controversies” (15th edition, 2020).


The New OER for Nutrition

Learning Objectives

By the end of this section, you will be able to:

  • x

xx

Food Deserts

Read the following statement from a traditional textbook publisher:

“In addition, low-income residents of urban or rural areas called food deserts lack access to even one neighborhood grocery store. Often carless, these people must travel for miles by bus, hire a car, or ride with friends to shop for fresh, affordable foods. Nearby convenience stores and fast-food places sell mostly packaged sweets, sugary drinks, refined starches, fried foods, and fatty meats—foods typical of eating patterns that predict high rates of obesity and chronic diseases. Shopping at specialty stores, such as urban fruit stands and seafood shops, improves the diet but may be too costly for most residents. Programs that provide lower-cost groceries, establish community gardens, and improve transportation may help, but researchers must still establish the most effective ways of improving diet quality in these areas.”[1]

Reflect: Based on the above quote, do you consider the area(s) around East Los Angeles College to be a food desert? Do you consider the area(s) around ELAC’s South Gate campus to be a food desert? Why or why not?

 

[USDA data]


  1. Webb, Frances Sizer, and Eleanor Noss Whitney. Nutrition: Concepts & Controversies. Fifteenth edition. Boston, MA: Cengage Learning, 2020, p. 335

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More Than Free Copyright © 2022 by Cynthia Mari Orozco is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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