|
|
Nov 22, 2024
|
|
NS 4880 - Applied Dietetics in Food Service Systems Spring. 4 credits. Student option grading.
Prerequisite: HADM 1360 , HADM 3365 , or intro food service management course, NS 2470 and BIOMI 2900 . Enrollment limited to: senior DPD (Dietetics) students. Junior DPD (Dietetics) students by permission of instructor. Course fee: approximately $110 for special supplies/training and activities.
E. Gier.
Gain experience in facility design; equipment selection, use, and care; job analysis and evaluation; human resources planning; management of financial resources; recipe development and volume food production; computer-assisted management; employee training; and applied safety and sanitation standards. Through planning and executing a themed event, students develop skills required to operate/manage a food service program. Application of quality management in food service operations and facility management is stressed. Laboratories are arranged through Cornell Dining and other off-campus sites. Completion of a professional portfolio is required. ServSafe training and examination is conducted; successful completion results in ServSafe manager certification.
Outcome 1: Apply the concepts of management to a foodservice organization through activities and projects, and practical experience.
Outcome 2: Articulate how to implement decision- making by choosing a course of behavior from a number of possible alternatives; identify situations in simulation of foodservice operations which require the decision-making process to provide the viable solution.
Outcome 3: Illustrate the importance of constantly evaluating and reevaluating procedures, and recognizing the need for change only when change is an improvement.
Outcome 4: Describe how the menu serves as the basis and format of activity in a foodservice operation and guide for budgetary controls.
Outcome 5: Utilize quality control considerations and mechanisms in foodservice operations.
Outcome 6: Demonstrate knowledge of food science and preparation techniques in regular laboratory assignments, and the product formulation/sensory evaluation project.
Outcome 7: Demonstrate an appreciation for orderliness in planning, preparation, production and serving of food and its relationship to job analysis and work simplification.
Outcome 8: Demonstrate an appreciation of the importance of kitchen equipment layout and design and their relationship to efficient foodservice production and service.
Outcome 9: Utilize basic knowledge of microorganisms and sanitation in the receiving, storage, preparation, preservation, processing and serving of food (HACCP).
Outcome 10: Interact on a personal and professional level with foodservice personnel, function as a team member, and develop high standards of workmanship. Exhibit a high degree of professional ethics and an appreciation for the need of confidentiality within a business or health care facility.
Add to Favorites (opens a new window)
|
|
|