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How Do You Revive Motivation and Appetite for Food Safety Education?

April 26, 2015

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Since joining FDA in 1998, I have attended two of the four national Consumer Food Safety Education Conferences that have been held. As an education specialist I develop food safety materials and programs. It’s interesting and rewarding work, but from time to time a kind of stale feeling creeps in, a sense that you’re just doing variations of things you’ve done a lot of before. So the question is: how do you revive your motivation, your appetite for what you’re doing? Two things work for me. One is a big new project unlike anything I’ve done before, but those don’t come along very often, primarily because they typically are expensive and the resources are rarely available.

The other? Attend a conference where your peers gather, where you can absorb some of the energy behind all the food safety education activity going on in our large and busy country. I had been to many conferences before while in other jobs and generally found them interesting, but what a difference in attending one that was entirely focused on the kind of work that I was doing. Everyone I met, every presentation I heard, bore directly on what I do every day. My only problem was choosing what would be most useful to me among breakout sessions. And aside from whom I met and what I learned, it was fun. I found myself talking to people I had only known from email exchanges and telecons, people who were using materials I had had a hand in developing and distributing (and who had suggestions to make them more effective), and people I didn’t know anything about who had creative and unusual approaches to food safety education.

I missed the first national food safety education conference because I wasn’t working in the field at the time, and I missed the last one because of a prior commitment. But I won’t miss the one coming up in December.

Howard Seltzer is National Education Advisor at the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition. 

 

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: BAC Fighter, CFSEC, Consumer Food Safety Education Conference, Fight BAC, food safety, Food safety education

Recommit to the Need for Consumer Food Safety Education

April 26, 2015

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Attending the Consumer Food Safety Education Conference (this year, Dec. 4-5 in Arlington, VA) is important to me on many levels. Because the conference focuses on food safety education, there’s a much more targeted educational approach that meets my needs. And because it is targeted, it attracts people like me who are trying to make a difference in food safety education, which enriches the networking opportunities.

I know I can’t go to every conference that comes up, so I always look closely at the programming. Will I get the latest, science-based information available? Are the sessions going to help me in my day-to-day work? Will I see the right people that I can learn from (and steal ideas from!)? Will and I (and my employer) get something out of this – what’s the ROI?

I’ve attended several of the previous Consumer Food Safety Education Conferences, and each time, it’s met my needs. I’ve learned things that expanded my knowledge, challenged my ideas, and recommitted me to the need for consumer food safety education.  This is an issue that can’t be solved by one person, or even a handful. It takes all of us working in concert to get the word out, to help consumers make those changes that will safeguard themselves and their families. It’s validating and encouraging to be among other people who have this same passion and commitment to food safety education.

Like many people who attend the conference, I’m a conduit for others. The information shared at the conference doesn’t stop with me or the several hundred food safety educators who attend. It’s multiplied and amplified as each of us works to improve consumer food safety practices. I find it’s well worth my time and attention. I wouldn’t miss it.

Kathy Means is Vice President of Industry Relations at the Produce Marketing Association. 

 

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: BAC Fighter, CFSEC, Consumer Food Safety Education Conference, Fight BAC, food safety, Food safety education

Marsha Lockard, NEAFCS President

January 8, 2015

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I was honored to represent the National Extension Association of Family and Consumer Sciences (NEAFCS) at the Partnership for Food Safety Education summit in Chicago the first part of March. The summit was a wonderful opportunity to network with other professionals who are engaged in food safety education.

As the president of NEAFCS, I represent over 2,000 extension educators throughout the United States who are actively engaged in consumer education. Food safety education has always been a priority for Extension, and as employees of the national land grant universities our mission is provide up to date researched based information to consumers.

As a national association, we compile the impact of our educators programming nationwide and have been consolidating that data into national impact statements that illustrate the breath of our educational efforts. Below are some highlights from a sample of the current programs sponsored by Extension:

Food Handler Education Program – ServSafe food safety training and certification program

Pennsylvania – 1,863 individuals certified for operation of their food service establishment.
Indiana – educators trained over 3,000 individuals who work in the food retail industry, assisting them to obtain certification as safe food handlers
Consumer Food Safety – Extension provides research-based information regarding food safety and storage through response to consumer inquiries

Ohio – 400 gardeners attended a one day workshop on increasing their knowledge of safe food practices
Nebraska – 125 participants attended “Bite When the Temperature is Right” learning how to calibrate a thermometer and use it when cooking meat and poultry
Cooking for Crowds –

Pennsylvania – trained volunteers from non-profit organization who serve meals to over 300,000 customers in a 3 month period, proper food safety practices
Hand Washing Education –

Idaho – basic hand washing taught to the hundreds of international athletes at the World Special Olympics, through use of “Germ City” an interactive program
Food Preservation and Canning –

Mississippi – educators teach “Basic Hazard Critical Control Points” training
South Dakota – following completion of food preservation workshops 88% of the participants adopted critical safe food handling practices
These are just a few examples of the educational effort of NEAFCS Extension Educators. If you would like to view our impact pieces please visit our website at www.neafcs.org. NEAFCS is very excited to be a part of the Partnership for Food Safety Education and we look forward to assisting in the efforts to educate consumer on the importance of safe food handling practices to reduce food borne illness.

Filed Under: Leaderboard Tagged With: CFSEC, Consumer Food Safety Education Conference, Food handling, food safety, Food safety education, Food safety training, National Extension Association of Family and Consumer Sciences, NEAFCS

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