How food nourishes the body, how food is grown and distributed, and how to make informed choices about what to eat within the real conditions of your life. Food is not only fuel. It is culture, economy, ecology, and politics. Understanding food systems helps us make better personal decisions and participate in the collective choices that shape what is available, affordable, and safe to eat.
Nutrition and food systems at Early Years level is about building two foundational understandings: that different foods have different roles in keeping the body healthy, and that food comes from somewhere. Both ideas are often invisible to children whose food arrives already prepared. Connecting food to its origins, to the farmers and ecosystems that produce it, and to the cultural knowledge embedded in how it is grown and cooked builds a relationship with food that supports both good nutrition and food system awareness throughout life. In agricultural communities, children often have more direct experience of food production than children in urban settings, and this knowledge should be honoured and extended rather than replaced by imported nutritional frameworks. Traditional foods are often nutritionally excellent and should be presented as such. The challenge in many communities is not that traditional diets are poor but that dietary diversity is narrowing under economic pressure and the availability of cheaper processed alternatives. All activities use simple, direct language at B1 CEFR level.
A drawing of a meal showing clearly different food types: a starchy base (ugali, rice, yam), a protein source (beans, fish, egg, meat), and a vegetable or fruit. The completion names two specific foods, identifies the category each belongs to, and names a specific function: maize gives me energy to run and think; beans help my muscles grow and repair; spinach gives me vitamins that help me not get sick.
Award marks for including foods from at least two different categories, for using genuinely local and familiar foods rather than imported examples, and for function statements that go beyond this food is healthy to name a specific body function. Celebrate local traditional foods as much as any other foods.
This food is groundnut soup. The groundnuts in it came from a groundnut plant grown in a field near our village. To grow it, someone needed to prepare the soil before the rains, plant the seeds at the right depth, keep the weeds down so they did not compete with the plants, and harvest the nuts at the right time before they rotted in the ground. Without rain at the right time and soil that holds enough water, this food would not exist.
Award marks for tracing at least two steps back along the food chain, for naming specific agricultural knowledge or labour rather than just saying someone grew it, and for identifying a specific dependency on ecological conditions. Children in agricultural communities will often produce richer and more specific answers than this model.
Imported or processed foods are better or more modern than traditional foods.
Traditional foods are not backward or inferior versions of modern foods. Many traditional diets are nutritionally excellent, having been refined over generations to provide what the body needs from locally available ingredients. Processed and imported foods are often more expensive, less nutritious, and less adapted to local conditions than traditional alternatives. The idea that traditional foods are poor and modern processed foods are better is a marketing construct that has caused genuine nutritional harm in many communities by shifting diets away from nutritionally rich traditional foods towards cheaper, calorie-dense but nutrient-poor processed products.
More food always means better nutrition.
Malnutrition includes both undernutrition (not enough calories or nutrients) and overnutrition (too many calories, often combined with too few essential nutrients). It is possible to eat plenty of food while still being deficient in important vitamins and minerals if the diet lacks variety. Hidden hunger, the term used for micronutrient deficiency in people who appear adequately fed, affects billions of people globally, including many in communities where caloric food is abundant. Good nutrition requires both enough food and sufficient variety.
Food is just fuel: what matters is getting enough calories.
While calories provide energy, the body also requires many other substances to function properly: vitamins, minerals, essential fatty acids, fibre, and clean water. These are not optional extras but essential components of health. A diet that provides sufficient calories but is deficient in micronutrients produces poor growth in children, weakened immune function, impaired brain development, and a range of specific deficiency diseases. Beyond nutrition, food also plays social, cultural, psychological, and ecological roles that are genuinely important for human flourishing.
Nutrition and food systems at primary level introduces students to the science of nutrition and the practical knowledge of food safety, alongside a broader understanding of how food is produced, processed, and distributed.
Macronutrients are the three main energy-providing nutrients: carbohydrates (the primary energy source, found in starchy foods, sugars, and some vegetables), proteins (used for building and repairing tissues, found in legumes, meat, fish, eggs, and dairy), and fats (concentrated energy storage and essential for brain function, found in oils, nuts, and animal products). Micronutrients are vitamins and minerals required in small amounts for specific functions: iron (required for oxygen transport in blood, deficiency causes anaemia), iodine (required for thyroid function and brain development, deficiency causes goitre and intellectual impairment), vitamin A (required for immune function and vision, deficiency causes blindness and increased mortality), and zinc (required for immune function and growth). Micronutrient deficiencies are often invisible to casual observation but have profound effects on health, cognitive development, and productivity.
Foodborne illness is among the most common preventable health problems globally. The main causes are contamination of food with pathogens through unsafe water, poor hygiene, improper storage, or inadequate cooking. The five keys to safer food, developed by the WHO, provide a practical framework: keep clean, separate raw and cooked food, cook food thoroughly, keep food at safe temperatures, and use safe water and raw materials.
Food insecurity, the state of not having reliable access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food, affects hundreds of millions of people globally and is concentrated in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia.
Poverty, conflict, climate vulnerability, land rights, market failures, and agricultural underinvestment. Understanding food insecurity as a structural problem rather than an individual failure is essential for both personal resilience and civic engagement.
The traditional food I am investigating is moringa leaf sauce, which is prepared by cooking fresh or dried moringa leaves with onion, tomato, and groundnut paste. Moringa leaves are exceptionally nutritious: they are one of the richest plant sources of iron, vitamin A, calcium, and protein available locally, which means this one dish supports bone growth, immune function, oxygen transport, and vision. In our community, there is a traditional practice of feeding moringa leaf sauce especially to pregnant women and new mothers, which may reflect accumulated knowledge that these groups have particularly high iron and vitamin A needs. Despite this, moringa sauce is eaten much less often than it used to be, partly because young people prefer other dishes and partly because the preparation is time-consuming. This is a real nutritional loss for the community.
Award marks for: a specific and real traditional food rather than a generic one; accurate nutritional information connected to specific body functions; genuine engagement with traditional knowledge about the food rather than ignoring it; and honest analysis of why the food is eaten more or less than it should be. Strong answers will identify a specific nutritional benefit that is particularly relevant to a group in the community, showing understanding of differential nutritional needs.
A child who is not visibly thin is well nourished.
Visible thinness is a sign of severe acute malnutrition, which is the most visibly dramatic form but not the most common. Many forms of malnutrition are invisible: stunting (chronic undernutrition producing reduced height), micronutrient deficiency, and overweight with micronutrient deficiency all occur in children who do not look dramatically thin. A child who is growing but slowly, who gets sick frequently, who is tired and has difficulty concentrating, or who is overweight may all be malnourished in different ways. Body weight and appearance are poor indicators of nutritional status.
Cooking destroys all the nutrition in vegetables.
Cooking does reduce some heat-sensitive nutrients, particularly vitamin C and some B vitamins. But cooking also increases the bioavailability of many other nutrients by breaking down cell walls and destroying anti-nutritional factors. Cooked tomatoes, for example, provide more of the antioxidant lycopene than raw tomatoes. Cooking legumes destroys compounds that inhibit protein and mineral absorption. Many traditional cooking methods, including fermentation and slow cooking, increase nutritional value. The effect of cooking on nutrition depends on the specific nutrient, the cooking method, and the cooking time. Short cooking with minimal water retains the most nutrients; prolonged boiling with lots of water loses the most.
Food from the supermarket is safer than food grown locally.
The safety of food depends on how it was grown, processed, and handled, not on where it was purchased. Locally grown food handled with appropriate food safety practices is as safe as or safer than supermarket food. Supermarket food can be contaminated at any point in a long supply chain. Some imported processed foods contain levels of salt, sugar, or additives that are nutritionally harmful. Some locally grown food may carry pesticide residues or be handled unsafely. The relevant question is not local versus supermarket but how the food was produced and handled.
Hunger and food insecurity are caused primarily by laziness or lack of effort.
Food insecurity is caused primarily by structural factors: poverty, conflict, climate vulnerability, land rights inequity, market failures, inadequate agricultural infrastructure, and unequal distribution of resources. The majority of people experiencing food insecurity work extremely hard but face conditions that make adequate food production or purchase impossible regardless of effort. The global food system produces enough calories to feed the entire world population, yet hundreds of millions of people go hungry: this is a distribution and access problem, not a production or effort problem. Blaming hungry people for their food insecurity is both empirically wrong and prevents engagement with the actual causes.
Nutrition and food systems at secondary level engages students with the structural, political, and ecological dimensions of how food is produced and distributed globally, and with the specific challenges of the nutrition transition and ultra-processed food. The global food system: the modern food system is deeply globalised: what is grown where, how it is processed, and who profits are determined by international trade rules, commodity markets, corporate concentration, and geopolitical factors as much as by local agricultural conditions. Four companies control the majority of global grain trade. A small number of seed and agrochemical companies control most of the world's commercial seed supply. Understanding these structural features is essential for civic engagement with food policy.
Across the world, traditional diverse diets are being replaced by diets with more ultra-processed food, more animal products, and less dietary diversity. This transition is associated with rapidly rising rates of overweight, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. It is driven by urbanisation, rising incomes, food industry marketing, and the increasing affordability of ultra-processed food relative to traditional whole foods.
NOVA food classification system distinguishes between unprocessed and minimally processed foods, processed culinary ingredients, processed foods, and ultra-processed foods. Ultra-processed foods are industrial formulations made from substances extracted or derived from foods, with little or no intact food, and with additives used to imitate the taste, texture, and appearance of real food. Research consistently links high consumption of ultra-processed food with increased risk of obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, some cancers, and depression. The food industry has used strategies similar to the tobacco industry to create doubt about this evidence and to lobby against regulatory action.
The concept of food sovereignty, developed by the international peasant movement La Via Campesina, holds that communities have the right to define their own food and agriculture systems rather than having these determined by corporate interests and international trade rules. Food sovereignty is distinct from food security (having enough to eat) and represents a claim about democratic control over food systems.
Industrial agriculture produces most of the world's food but does so through practices that are degrading the soil, water, and biodiversity on which future food production depends: soil erosion, groundwater depletion, biodiversity loss, and greenhouse gas emissions. Agroecological approaches, including many traditional farming practices, offer models for food production that are more ecologically sustainable.
The world does not produce enough food to feed everyone.
Global food production currently provides enough calories to feed the entire world population and more. The World Food Programme and FAO consistently report that hunger is not caused by insufficient production but by insufficient access: poverty, conflict, distribution failures, and food waste prevent food from reaching the people who need it. Approximately one third of all food produced for human consumption is lost or wasted. The global food system is a distribution and equity problem, not a production capacity problem, though climate change and ecological degradation are real threats to future production capacity.
Small-scale traditional farming cannot feed growing populations.
Research on agroecological and small-scale farming consistently shows that these approaches can be highly productive when properly supported and that they often outperform industrial monocultures on measures of total food output per unit of land (as opposed to yield of a single crop). Small farms produce the majority of the world's food in most low-income countries. The claim that only industrial farming can feed growing populations is contested by agronomists, ecologists, and development researchers, many of whom argue that agroecological approaches offer the only path to sustainable food production because they maintain the ecological systems on which all agriculture depends.
Eating meat is nutritionally essential.
Meat is nutritionally valuable, providing high-quality protein, iron, zinc, and B vitamins including B12. But a well-planned plant-based diet can provide adequate nutrition for most people at most life stages, including infants, children, and pregnant women, when sufficient dietary diversity is achieved. Legumes, whole grains, vegetables, nuts, and seeds can provide most nutrients found in meat. Vitamin B12 is the primary concern in fully plant-based diets as it is found almost exclusively in animal products and should be supplemented or obtained from fortified foods. In communities where meat is consumed in moderate quantities alongside a diverse plant diet, the diet is typically nutritionally sound.
Food companies can be trusted to make nutritionally healthy products because it is in their interest to keep customers healthy.
Food company profit incentives are not aligned with consumer health. Products that are high in salt, sugar, and fat are more palatable and more addictive than nutritionally balanced alternatives, which makes them more profitable. Marketing budgets are concentrated on the least nutritious products. Industry-funded nutrition research consistently produces results more favourable to industry products than independent research on the same topics. The food industry has used strategies similar to the tobacco industry to create doubt about evidence of harm from ultra-processed food and to lobby against nutritional regulations. Consumer health and corporate profit are frequently in tension in the food industry, and trusting companies to resolve this tension in favour of health without regulation is not supported by evidence.
Key texts and resources: Michael Pollan's In Defence of Food (2008, Penguin) is the most accessible account of the nutrition transition and the case for returning to whole food diets: his principle eat food, not too much, mostly plants summarises much of the evidence. For the NOVA classification and ultra-processed food research: Carlos Monteiro's work is the foundational source, and his research group at the University of Sao Paulo publishes freely accessible summaries. For food sovereignty: Via Campesina (viacampesina.org) is the international peasant movement that developed the concept and provides extensive freely available materials. For sustainable agriculture and agroecology: IPES-Food (ipes-food.org) publishes the most rigorous and accessible reports on sustainable food system transformation. For food systems and climate: the EAT-Lancet Commission's Food in the Anthropocene report (2019, available at eatforum.org) is the most comprehensive scientific assessment of sustainable healthy diets. For food security data: FAOSTAT (fao.org/faostat) provides freely accessible data on food production, trade, and security globally. For African food systems specifically: the Alliance for Food Sovereignty in Africa (afsafrica.org) provides perspectives and research from African civil society on food sovereignty. The work of Olivier De Schutter as UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food provides important analysis of food systems from a human rights perspective, freely available at ohchr.org. For traditional food knowledge: the Bioversity International food systems research programme documents traditional food knowledge and agrobiodiversity across many countries, with particular strength in Africa and Asia, available at bioversityinternational.org. For nutrition in African contexts: the African Nutrition Society and the work of nutrition researchers at the University of Ghana, University of Nairobi, and other African institutions provide contextually grounded perspectives on African nutrition challenges.
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