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Food Safety Education Using Music Parodies
Authors:Carl K Winter  Angela M Fraser  Jeanne B Gleason  Susan K Hovey  Sandra M McCurdy  O Sue Snider
Institution:Author Winter is with Dept. of Food Science and Technology, Univ. of California, Davis, CA, U.S.A. Authors Fraser and Hovey are with Cooperative Extension Service, Clemson Univ., Clemson, SC 29634, U.S.A. Author Gleason is with Media Productions, New Mexico State Univ., Las Cruces, NM 88003, U.S.A. Author McCurdy is with Family and Consumer Sciences, Univ. of Idaho, Moscow, ID 83844, U.S.A. Author Snider is with Animal and Food Sciences, Univ. of Delaware, Newark, DE 19718, U.S.A. Direct inquiries to author Winter (E-mail: ).
Abstract:ABSTRACT:  Musical parodies of contemporary songs with their lyrics altered to address current food safety issues were incorporated into a variety of food safety educational programs and the effectiveness of the music was evaluated by semiquantitative and qualitative measures. Audiences receiving the music-enriched curricula included school foodservice supervisors, school foodservice managers, culinary arts instructors, culinary arts students, Family and Consumer Sciences teachers, and youth aged 8 to 12 y and studies were conducted in South Carolina, North Carolina, and Delaware. Among school foodservice supervisors, school foodservice managers, and culinary arts students, most participants were able to recall the main points of each song that was introduced in the curriculum. The culinary arts students were less likely to recall the main points of each song than were the other 2 groups, possibly because of the lack of prior knowledge of food safety practices as well as a lack of preference for the style of songs used. Family and Consumer Sciences teachers were enthusiastic about the use of the music but also identified potential barriers to the successful use of the music, due to the potential lack of appropriate audiovisual equipment, a lack of skills in using such equipment, and time constraints for the use of music in curricula due to the strong emphasis on end of year testing. Participants in the summer youth groups demonstrated significant increases between pre- and posttest examinations of safe food handling behaviors and most were able to quote lines or phrases from the songs.
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