تحلیل عوامل مؤثر بر سواد غذا در میان دانشجویان دانشگاه شیراز
محورهای موضوعی : پژوهش های ترویج و آموزش کشاورزیبهاره زارعی منش 1 , راضیه نامدار 2
1 - دانشگاه شیراز
2 - عضوهیات علمی دانشکده کشاورزی دانشگاه شیراز
کلید واژه: : سواد غذا, نگرانی زیست محیطی, سواد زیست محیطی, دانشگاه شیراز,
چکیده مقاله :
امروزه دستیابی به امنیت غذایی با وجود رشد تغییرات آب و هوایی، افزایش تصاعدی جمعیت جهان و همچنین کاهش ظرفیتهای زیست محیطی طبیعت برای تولید مواد غذایی، به مراتب بسیار دشوارتر از دهههای پیش است. سواد غذا به عنوان راهکاری مناسب برای رسیدن به امنیت غذایی به عنوان مفهومی نو ظهور مطرح شده است و رویکردی امیدوار کننده برای تغذیه سالم و مناسب جامعه می باشد، زیرا بر جنبههای اساسی غذا از جمله مهارت، سلامت، حفظ محیط زیست تاکید دارد. در این پژوهش به بررسی رابطه ابعاد و عوامل اثر گذار بر سواد غذایی در بین دانشجویان تحصیلات تکمیلی دانشگاه شیراز پرداخته شد. براساس یافته های تحقیق، در مجموع دانشجویان مورد مطالعه از نظر سواد غذایی در سطوح مطلوبی قرار داشتند اما از لحاظ عواملی همچون سبک تغذیه و سواد زیست محیطی در سطح ضعیف و از لحاظ نگرانی زیست محیطی در سطح بسیار ضعیف بودند. یافتههای پژوهش نشان داد بین دانشجویان با رشتههای تحصیلی مختلف و سطح درآمد متفاوت خانوار، تفاوتی از لحاظ سواد غذا وجود نداشت. اما دانشجویان متاهل نسبت به دانشجویان مجرد سطح سواد غذایی بالاتری داشتند. نتایج بررسی ارتباط علّی در قالب آزمون تحلیل مسیر نشان داد در بین متغیرهای وارد شده در تحلیل مسیر، سواد زیست محیطی (با ضریب 0/43)و نگرانی زیست محیطی (با ضریب 0/29) از لحاظ بیشترین تاثیر بر سواد غذا مطرح بودند و استفاده از رسانهها و منابع اطلاعاتی کمترین تاثیر (با مقدار 0/06-) را نشان داد. برمبنای نتایج حاصل پیشنهاداتی در راستای ارتقاء سواد غذا ارائه شده است.
Today, achieving food security is far more difficult than in previous decades, despite the growing climate change, the increasing population of the world, and the degradation of nature's environmental capacity to produce food. Food literacy as an emerging concept has been proposed a viable way to achieve food security and is a promising approach to healthy and proper nutrition for society, as it emphasizes the essential aspects of food, including skill, health, and environmental protection. The purpose of this study was to investigate the relationship between dimensions and factors affecting food literacy among postgraduate students of Shiraz University. According to the research findings, the total means of students studied was at a desirable level in terms of food literacy, but in terms of factors such as nutrition style and environmental literacy at a low level and in terms of environmental concerns at very low level. The study found that there was no difference between students in terms of food literacy and different levels of household income and major. But married students had higher levels of food literacy than single students. The results of the causal relationship test in the form of path analysis test showed that among the variables included in the path analysis, environmental literacy (0.43) and environmental concern (0.29) were the most influential in terms of food literacy and the use of media and information resources (-0.06) showed the least impacts. Based on the results, some recommendation have been made to improve food literacy.
- آذر، الف. (1381). تحلیل مسیر (Path Analysis) و علت یابی در علم مدیریت. مجله مجتمع آموزش عالی قم،سال 4.
- سورانی، ف.، و احمدوند، م. (1398). تعیین کنندههای رفتار تولید ضایعات مواد غذایی خانوارها در بخش مرکزی شهرستان نجفآباد: کاربرد مدل تلفیقی. علوم ترویج و آموزش کشاورزی ایران. جلد 15. شماره 1. صص 39-23.
- Andersen, P. (2009). Food security: definition and measurement. Food Security, 1(1), 5-7.
- Anderson, A. S. (2007). Nutrition interventions in women in low-income groups in the UK. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 66(1), 25-32.
- Begley, A., & Gallegos, D. (2010). Should cooking be a dietetic competency?. Nutrition & Dietetics, 67(1), 41-46.
- Bellotti, B. (2010). Food literacy: Reconnecting the city with the country. Agricultural Science, 22(3), 29-34
- Burrows, T. L., Lucas, H., Morgan, P. J., Bray, J., & Collins, C. E. (2015). Impact evaluation of an after-school cooking skills program in a disadvantaged Community: Back to basics. Canadian Journal of Dietetic Practice and Research, 76(2), 1e7. http://dx.doi.org/10.3148/cjdpr-2015-005.
- Caraher, M., Dixon, P., Lang, T., & Carr-Hill, R. (1999). The state of cooking in England: the relationship of cooking skills to food choice. British food journal, 101(8), 590-609.
- Cleland, A. B. (2013). Food knowledgeewhat is it and where does it come from: A study of culinary management students at william angliss institute. Master’s Thesis. Retrieved from Minerva Access https://minerva-access.unimelb.edu.au/handle/ 11343/38404.
- Colatruglio, S., & Slater, J. (2014). Food Literacy: Bridging the gap between food, nutrition and well-being. In Sustainable well-being: Concepts, issues, and educational practices (pp. 35–55). Winnipeg, MB: ESWB Press.
- Condrasky, M. D., & Hegler, M. (2010). How culinary nutrition can save the health of a nation. Journal of Extension, 48(2), 1e6
- Contento, I. R., Koch, P. A., Lee, H., & Calabrese-Barton, A. (2010). Adolescents demonstrate improvement in obesity risk behaviors after completion of choice, control & change, a curriculum addressing personal agency and autonomous motivation. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 110(12), 1830e1839.
- Crawford D, Ball K, Mishra G, Salmon J, Timperio A(2007): Which food-related behaviours are associated with healthier intakes of fruits and vegetables among women? Public Health Nutr, 10(3):256-265.
- Cullen, T., Hatch, J., Martin, W., Higgins, J. W., & Sheppard, R. (2015). Food Literacy: Definition and framework for action. Canadian Journal of Dietetic Practice and Research, 76(3), 140e145
- Falcon, W. P., & Naylor, R. L. (2005). Rethinking food security for the twenty-first century. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 87(5), 1113-1127.
- Farnworth, C. R., Jiggins, J. L. S., & Thomas, E. V. (2008). Towards a new agenda. In Creating Food Futures. Trade, Ethics and the Environment (pp. 229-236). Gower Publishing.
- Folkerth, C., (2015). Students’ knowledge and opinions concerning genetically modified organisms: A survey (Master’s thesis, University of Colorado, Boulder, United States of America).
- Fulkerson, J. A., Kubik, M. Y., Rydell, S., Boutelle, K. N., Garwick, A., Story, M., et al. (2011). Focus groups with working parents of school-aged Children: What's needed to improve family meals? Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, 43(3), 189e193. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jneb.2010.03.006.
- Hersch, D., Perdue, L., Ambroz, T., & Boucher, J. L. (2014). The impact of cooking classes on food-related preferences, attitudes, and behaviors of school-aged children: A systematic review of the evidence, 2003e2014. Preventing Chronic Disease, 11, E193. http://dx.doi.org/10.5888/pcd11.140267.
- Home Economics Victoria (2013), Healthy Eating and Food Literacy in Secondary Schools, Home Economics Victoria, Mount Waverley, viewed 10 May 2015, http://www. homeeconomics.com.au/projects/hefl.aspx.
- International Union of Nutrition Sciences (2005). The Giessen declaration.http: //www.iuns.org/features/05-09%20NNS%20Declaration. pdf. Retrieved 19 April, 2018.
- Johnson-Welch, C., Alemu, B., Msaki, T. P., Sengendo, M., Kigutha, H., & Wolff, A. (2000). Improving Household Food Security: Institutions, Gender, and Integrated Approaches. 1-50.
- Keats, S., & Wiggins, S. (2014). Future diets: Implications for agriculture and food prices. Retrieved from http://www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk/files/odi assets/publications-opinion-files/8776.pdf
- Kimura, A. H. (2011). Food education as food literacy: privatized and gendered food knowledge in contemporary Japan. Agriculture and Human Values, 28(4), 465-482.
- Korthals M. (2011).Ethics of Food Production and Consumption 2004; Available from: http//www.app.wur.nl/NR/rdonlyres/E96C 8F3F-A0A4-48C3-956C 355C676B1836/137422/MichielKorthals.
- Lang R, Caraher M.( 2001).Is there a culinary skills transition? Data and debate from the UK about changes in cooking culture. HEIA J, 8(2):2-14.
- Mclaughlin, C., Tarasuk, V., & Kreiger, N. (2003). An examination of at-home food preparation activity among low-income, food-insecure women. Journal of the American Dietetic Association, 103(11), 1506-1512.
- Mikkelsen, B. E., Rasmussen, V. B., & Young, I. (2005). The role of school food service in promoting healthy eating at school–a perspective from an ad hoc group on nutrition in schools, Council of Europe. Food Service Technology, 5(1), 7-15.
- Nicklas, T. A., Jahns, L., Bogle, M. L., Chester, D. N., Giovanni, M., Klurfeld, D. M., et al. (2013). Barriers and facilitators for consumer adherence to the dietary guidelines for americans: The health study. Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, 113(10), 1317e1331.
- Parfitt, J., Barthel, M., & Macnaughton, S. (2010). Food waste within food supply chains: Quantification and potential for change to 2050. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 365(1554), 3065e3081. https:// doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2010.0126.
- Poudel, B. P., & Sapkota, M. (2016). Association between food literacy components and demographic characters among.
- Ratcliffe, M. M., Merrigan, K. A., Rogers, B. L., & Goldberg, J. P. (2011). The effects of school garden experiences on middle school-aged students’ knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors associated with vegetable consumption. Health promotion practice, 12(1), 36-43.
- Robson, S. M., Stough, C. O., & Stark, L. J. (2016). The impact of a pilot cooking intervention for parent-child dyads on the consumption of foods prepared away from home. Appetite, 99, 177e184. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/ j.appet.2016.01.021.
- Roder, M. (2008). A cultural ecological approach for meal security. Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany.
- Ronto, R., Ball, L., Pendergast, D., & Harris, N. (2016). Adolescents' perspectives on food literacy and its impact on their dietary behaviours. Appetite, 107, 549-557.
- Stockley, L. (2009). Review of dietary intervention models for black and minority ethnic groups. Part 1: an analysis of the BME situation in Wales. Review of dietary intervention models for black and minority ethnic groups. Part 1: an analysis of the BME situation in Wales.
- The Food Literacy Project. (2010). [http://foodliteracyproject.org/], Retrieved March 20, 2011.
- Thomas, H. M., & Irwin, J. D. (2011). Cook It Up! A community-based cooking program for at-risk youth: overview of a food literacy intervention. BMC research notes, 4(1), 495.
- Topley A.(2012).”At The Table: Acase for food literacy coordination”
- Truman, E., Lane, D., & Elliott, C. (2017). Defining food literacy: A scoping review. Appetite, 116, 365-371.
- Utter, J., Denny, S., Lucassen, M., & Dyson, B. (2016). Adolescent cooking abilities and Behaviors: Associations with nutrition and emotional well-being. Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, 48(1), 35e41.
- Vaitkeviciute, R., Ball, L. E., & Harris, N. (2015). The relationship between food literacy and dietary intake in adolescents: a systematic review. Public health nutrition, 18(4), 649-658.
- Valente, M., & Chaves, C. (2017). Perceptions and valuation of GM food: A study on the impact and importance of information provision. Cleaner Production, 172, 4110-4118.
- Vidgen, H. (2016). Relating food literacy to nutrition and health. In Food Literacy (pp. 82-100). Routledge.
- Vidgen, H. A. (2014). Food literacy: what is it and does it influence what we eat? (Doctoral dissertation, Queensland University of Technology).
- Vidgen, H. A., & Gallegos, D. (2014). Defining food literacy and its components. Appetite, 76, 50-59.
- Wrieden, W. L., Anderson, A. S., Longbottom, P. J., Valentine, K., Stead, M., Caraher, M., & Dowler, E. (2007). The impact of a community-based food skills intervention on cooking confidence, food preparation methods and dietary choices–an exploratory trial. Public health nutrition, 10(2), 203-211.
_||_