Difference between revisions of "The Edible World"

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  | label2 = Course Code | data2 = [[The Edible World|FOOD]]
 
  | label2 = Course Code | data2 = [[The Edible World|FOOD]]
 
  | label3 = Year Opened | data3 = 2001
 
  | label3 = Year Opened | data3 = 2001
  | label4 = Sites Offered | data4 = [[ALE]], [[GIL]], [[NUE]], [[SAN]], [[SPE]], [[WLA]]
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  | label4 = Sites Offered | data4 = [[SPE]]
| label5 = Previously Offered | data5 = [[MSA]], [[NUE]], [[NRS]], [[STP]], [[WDS]], [[WIN]]
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| label5 = Previously Offered | data5 = [[ALE]], [[GIL]], [[MSA]], [[NUE]], [[NRS]], [[SAN]], [[SFD]], [[STP]], [[WDS]], [[WIN]], [[WLA]]
 
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{{Baby CTY Courses}}
 
{{Baby CTY Courses}}
 
==Course Description==
 
==Course Description==
[https://web.archive.org/web/20010214052037/http://www.jhu.edu:80/gifted/ctysummer/catalogs/ys/science/food.htm From the CTY Course Catalog] (2001):
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From the CTY Course Catalog (2023):
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The saying goes, “You are what you eat,” and in this chemistry class, you’ll learn how true that adage really is. Examine the ways fats, proteins, and carbohydrates fuel our bodies and make energy for everything from taking a breath to reading a book to running a marathon. Through lab experiments and class discussions, examine the composition of familiar foods, consider the chemical reactions necessary to make them, and explore the role foods play in health and disease. Learn about vitamin D deficiency, study the labels of multivitamins, and complete a vitamin C titration to compare the nutritional value of common fruit juices. Analyze the contents of your favorite fast foods and learn about proteins while using a biuret solution to test for peptide bonds. Study freezing-point depression, the periodic table, and elemental properties while making your own ice cream. Keep a food journal, and at the end of the course, build your public speaking skills by giving a presentation about what you’ve learned.
  
Have you ever wondered about the ingredients in a diet soda, the purple stain left by grape juice, or the strange smell of vinegar? Why do canned foods last for years without refrigeration, and how do you make ice cream creamy? In this course, students take a closer look at the common products on grocery shelves, and use these items as a springboard to learning about chemistry and biotechnology.
 
   
 
The three basic building blocks of food— proteins, carbohydrates, and fats—are also the building blocks of all of life as we know it. Through activities, hands-on experiments, and field trips, students learn the role each of these molecules plays in health and disease, as well as how they are used and abused in the modern diet culture. Using Mendel’s early observations of pea plants, students gain a basic understanding of the principles of genetics and explore current questions in the field of selective breeding and genetic engineering. For example, how do scientists create a seedless watermelon or a broccoflower?
 
   
 
Laboratory exercises allow students to explore food chemistry, analyze the pigments produced by plants, and determine the caloric content of common foods. Students investigate what really happens when making ice cream, pasteurizing milk, or pickling cucumbers.
 
  
 
[[Category: Courses]]
 
[[Category: Courses]]
[[Category: Alexandria (ALE)]]
 
[[Category: Baltimore (Gilman)]]
 
[[Category: Brooklandville]]
 
[[Category: Los Angeles (Windward)]]
 
 
[[Category: New York]]
 
[[Category: New York]]
[[Category: Portola Valley]]
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[[Category: Palatine]]
[[Category: San Mateo]]
 
[[Category: Sandy Spring]]
 
[[Category: Santa Monica]]
 
[[Category: Venice]]
 

Latest revision as of 17:46, 7 November 2023

The Edible World
Science Course
Course CodeFOOD
Year Opened2001
Sites OfferedSPE
Previously OfferedALE, GIL, MSA, NUE, NRS, SAN, SFD, STP, WDS, WIN, WLA
Part of a series on
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Writing Workshop: Modern Fantasy
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Numbers: Zero to Infinity
Data and Chance · Introduction to Robotics
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Marine Ecology · The Physics of Engineering
Inventions · Examining the Evidence
Through the Microscope · The Sensory Brain
The Edible World · Crystals and Polymers
Be a Scientist! · Cloudy with a Chance of Science
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Animal Behavior · Flight Science
Forest Ecology · Rocks, Minerals, and Fossils
Meteorology · Bugs and Butterflies
Dynamic Earth · Bay Ecology II

Course Description

From the CTY Course Catalog (2023):

The saying goes, “You are what you eat,” and in this chemistry class, you’ll learn how true that adage really is. Examine the ways fats, proteins, and carbohydrates fuel our bodies and make energy for everything from taking a breath to reading a book to running a marathon. Through lab experiments and class discussions, examine the composition of familiar foods, consider the chemical reactions necessary to make them, and explore the role foods play in health and disease. Learn about vitamin D deficiency, study the labels of multivitamins, and complete a vitamin C titration to compare the nutritional value of common fruit juices. Analyze the contents of your favorite fast foods and learn about proteins while using a biuret solution to test for peptide bonds. Study freezing-point depression, the periodic table, and elemental properties while making your own ice cream. Keep a food journal, and at the end of the course, build your public speaking skills by giving a presentation about what you’ve learned.