3 Aug 2009
All the pictures from this post are from google images.
There I was sitting with my research for the sequel for KOOTANCHORU and realized that Dipali, Art, PG and Sue have already listed the major concepts in the comments section.
Dipali says,
“Great for mathematical concepts like weight, volume, division etc. Starting from purchasing of ingredients- costs of different things. Scientific concepts:The change that heat brings about to raw ingredients. How different ways of cooking can give a different end product with the same ingredient. Textures, odours, sizes, shapes- there’s a whole world of things to be learned and taught:)
Haven’t even scratched the surface yet!”
Artnavy takes it a step further and expands into the concept that food and culture go hand in hand. She says,
“u can teach about flavours- festivals- what the Gods like
temperature- ice- water – steam- pressure etc
weight colour texture shapes
vitmains- calories etc
of course satisfaction/ harmony./ organising skills/ leanring from mistakes and the whole team thingie are all a huge part of it”
PG’s point resonates with me when she says,
“In today’s times it is so important to realise the importance of healthy eating which is only possible through learning cooking. To learn about the basics of a balanced diet. And learning to develop taste for good food, I think, is very important for a healthy lifestyle too.”
Sue is looking in to the present as well as the past when she says,
“Great for teaching kids about household safety — how to handle fire, knives. Also great for hygiene. Also, the basic cleaning up most cooks do is great practice for when the kids have homes of their own.
They also learn how to store foodstuffs, grow herbs, mix and match tastes and smells. If you let them wash their own aprons and washcloths, the older ones learn basic hand laundering and stain removal skills. They may sound unimportant but they make such a big difference to one’s adult life!
Oh and if they cook in an assembly line — say for sandwiches or salads or whatever — it’s a good lesson in every role being an important one, no matter how small it seems.”
The learning that occurs in young children can be classified in to three main categories – social, physical and logico-mathematical. Cooking is a scientific process that effectively covers all the three categories.
For example take the process of making a basic scrambled egg recipe with your child. The steps would be as follows:
Every family has its own style. Some might add raw onions, fried onions, a bit of salsa, veggies, cheese..etc. Every family personalizes the basic recipe in to something that characterizes their style. Heck, some families eat eggs only on certain days based on religious restrictions. We are now talking about the social knowledge that is closely associated with food. We convey our macro culture as well as micro culture through food.
Physical knowledge is not just spatial awareness that can be learned through jumping and running. But it is the learning that comes with doing things physically. By touching, tasting, smelling. If the outcome is directly related to the action and can be varied by varying the initial action, the learning is rich. What better field to test and experiment that cooking? Very true in my kitchen. To hubby’s utter displeasure, I change my recipes every time. When I say rasam, he is not sure what he is getting till he tastes it. For more sad stories contact R@don’t_screw_up_my_fav_food_#$%&*!.com
Logico-mathematical refers to the math and science concepts that can be learned through cooking.
When you interpret a recipe for a child like this, imagine the symbolic association the child forms! She learns that picture=word=thought=print=language.
One learns to count, not just on paper, but in the real sense, “One means one of an object, two means two of the same object”
One learns to compare. Half cup is more than a quarter cup, but less than one cup. Plus they get a meaning full introduction in to part-whole relationship A.K.A fractions.
Through their senses they learn what it really means by solids and liquids.
Older kids learn to estimate. If I need one person needs two eggs, how many eggs do two people need? This forms basis for set theory, ratio, proportion, one-to-one-correspondence, multiplication and addition.
Cooking needs to flow in a certain order. So children learn about sequence and concept of time.
They observe transformation. When we warm butter it melts and later solidifies back to butter. When we heat butter, the fat separates and forms clarified butter. Now it will not revert back to butter. When we heat eggs, it curdles.
They learn how things work. Just look at the different kitchen tools in this picture. Isn’t it amazing that every utensil has a specific work. Now, we can’t flip an omelet using a soup ladle can’t we!
And you know what, this is just the tip of ice berg!
Next post: resources and practical how to’s.
On a totally unrelated note, how many of you think about Audrey Hepburn in Sabrina when you break eggs? “It’s all in the wrist”. Thousands of eggs in the past 15 years and I think about this every single time. See cooking brings back memories. May be trivial but will most certainly fill you with happiness 🙂
Technorati Tags: early child education. child development, kootanchoru, cooking for kids, cooking to learn, preschool curriculum, kids
9 Responses for "The Science Behind Cooking"
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Ah how these posts were missed. You fill a niche spot in the mommy blogdom UTBT. I so love the thought behind using cooking to teach these concepts! Maybe atleast this will send me to the kitchen
UTBT SAYS:Thanks Poppy. I consider myself a “fallen cook”. The thought of cooking two meals a day for the rest of my life is VERY depressing. So I get the kids inside to make the ordeal tolerable.
You picked up where you left off! And you did it with style 🙂 Very well thought out and presented post. Utbt touch, I guess.
Eggs remind me of a friend who didn’t eat them, but was so fascinated that she will want to break them for us when we made omlettes. We joked that she’ll start eating them soon and she did!
UTBT SAYS:Thanks Reva.
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Look look look.. she’s back. The whole world probably knows by now.
You were missed, your well researched posts were missed. Chulaisms and Miejaisms were missed.
Loved the series on cooking, I do many of those things, more instinctively just to keep them occupied in the kitchen while I get work done. Never realized there is so much learning to it. Will increase their kitchen timings with reduced guilt 🙂
UTBT SAYS: Hi there lovey. Hope the little ones are doing fine. Heard a lot abt them from YaadaYaada.
Hey, woah, I’ve been quoted. That’s so cool. 🙂
For the record, UTBT, I’ve really been enjoying your cooking-related posts.
UTBT SAYS: Thanks Sue.
Missed reading you UTBT! Popped up here and pleasantly surprised to see the excellent post 🙂
UTBT SAYS: MNIamma, thanks.
Who can forget Dr Seuss with your green eggs!
Lovely post- glad to be part of it!
UTBT SAYS: Thanks
Stumbled upon this site by chance. I run science clubs for young kids and want to incorporate more cooking activities. I was just thinking about how cooking can be used to teach science process skills. Your examples and ideas are great.
UTBT SAYS: Thanks Shaheen.
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