June, 2007
Japan for Sustainability Newsletter #058
Food Education as a Way to Improve the Global Environment
What is Food Education?
Food culture in Japan has long been based on rice (the staple food) and
seasonal foodstuffs. People around the world are attracted to Japanese
food, and one of its attractions is seen as its role in promoting
longevity. Since the 1990s, however, the country has shifted
increasingly toward a consumer society brimming with products and
information, and Japan's the dietary situation has changed rapidly. The
typical diet has become more Westernized, greater in variety, easier to
prepare, and includes more meals prepared outside the home. Healthy
dietary traditions cultivated here over centuries are disappearing --
traditions like regular meal times, nutritionally well-balanced diets,
cooking methods that minimize leftovers and food waste, and happy family
meals around the table.
Food education is one response to the threats to food traditions. In the
preamble of the Basic Law on Food Education, enacted in June 2005, food
education is considered a fundamental aspect of living, along with
intellectual, moral and physical education. The text states that food
education should promote learning about and the selection of healthy
foods, and help citizens to have healthy diets.
The law encourages actions such as (1) preservation of the best aspects
of traditional food culture, (2) appreciation of food production in
harmony with the environment, (3) revitalization of rural communities
engaged in agriculture, forestry and fisheries, and (4) improvement of
food self-sufficiency. Mr. Yukio Hattori, President of Hattori Nutrition
College and a proponent of the law, has been promoting food education in
three areas: food selection ability, table manners, and global food
issues.
Enactment of the Basic Law on Food Education
The government has been active on the issue of food education. Since the
mid-1990s Japan's Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and
Technology (MEXT) has been promoting health education that fosters life
skills. The Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF) has
been dealing with issues such as local production for local consumption
and the nation's level of food self-sufficiency. Meanwhile, prompted by
the emergence of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) and other food
safety problems, the Council for the Promotion of Food Education was
jointly established in November 2002 by three ministries: MEXT, MAFF and
the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare (MHLW). "Shoku-iku"
(literally, food education) has become a unifying concept that covers
diverse terminologies and movements in different circles: "food
education" or "dietary guidance" by educators and nutritionists,
"food-agriculture education" by agriculturists, children's cooking
classes organized by citizens, and a campaign that promotes rice
(instead of the currently more-common bread) in school lunch services.
Proponents say that people must pay more attention to and learn about
their diets in order to solve problems related to food safety,
misinformation, an overdependence on food imports, an increase in
lifestyle related diseases, and so on. They say that food education
should be boosted in a national effort to promote physical and mental
health. This requires cooperation among families, schools and local
communities as well as between rural producers and urban consumers who
value the traditional food culture.
'Early to Bed, Early to Rise plus Breakfast' Campaign
Studies have suggested that physical and mental health problems (loss of
interest in learning, physical weakness, obesity, and short tempers) can
be associated with disruptions of children's lifestyles at home,
including eating and sleeping habits. A 2004 survey on health and
nutrition by the MHLW in Japan found that 3.0 percent of children aged 7
to 14 and 34 percent of men in their twenties did not eat breakfast.
To improve the situation, MEXT came up with the "Early to Bed, Early to
Rise plus Breakfast" publicity campaign as part of its food education
efforts, believing that this would help children develop healthy and
regular lifestyles. In 2006, a national council was established to
promote this campaign on a private-sector basis. The council has been
conducting promoting awareness throughout the nation, aiming to create
momentum in society to support family education through efforts by the
whole community.
'Tokushima Miso Soup Project' at Ichiba Elementary School
Now, let us introduce a unique program, named the "Tokushima Miso Soup
Project," led by Mr. Yuji Fujimoto, a teacher at Ichiba Elementary
School in Awa City, Tokushima Prefecture. The school has been active in
community-based food education since 2005, when Ichiba Town (recently
changed to Awa City as a part of municipal amalgamation) was designated
by MEXT as a model municipality of schools, families and communities
joining forces to promote environmental education. Mr. Fujimoto, head of
environmental education at the school, has long been involved in
education with focus on food and agriculture as teaching materials,
while inviting cooperation in classes of various subjects and integrated
study. The school has been providing children with hands-on learning
experiences to help them develop life skills through interaction with
people in the community.
The "Tokushima Miso Soup Project" at Ichiba Elementary School was
launched to cope with the growing number of children who could not
concentrate in morning classes because they skipped breakfast or stayed
up late the previous night. Under the project, teachers use traditional
Japanese miso soup, which is familiar to children, as a means to draw
their attention to food, communities, and the environment. The school
conducted this project in collaboration with two other schools in the
prefecture. By studying miso soup, students became aware of the
importance of having breakfast, and developed an appreciation for their
community. They also enjoyed "eco-cooking" using locally produced food
in season. Their study then evolved into discussions about the issue of
food self-sufficiency.
In the first semester of 2006, the school children researched what
ingredients are used for miso soup and then prepared their own miso, or
fermented soybean paste. In the second semester, they cooked special
miso soup using the handmade miso and locally produced food. As a
preparation for the cooking, they studied seasonal foods, and noticed
that many of the seasonal food items are now available at any time of
year, regardless of the season. This was a cue to look at various
factors behind food supplies, such as advances in cultivation techniques,
advanced cooling and freezing technologies, and increasing imports. They
also discussed issues of local consumption of local products and the
environment, based on the results of their 2005 program in which they
cooked noodles, to practice the concept of local consumption of local
products. In this noodle program, the school invited a representative of
the Regional Agricultural Administration Office to talk about the
current situation of food self-sufficiency in Japan, and the viability
of local consumption of local products. Children learned about the risks
of overdependence on imported foods. When asked their impressions, their
comments were telling: "We'll be in trouble if food imports stopped
suddenly." "Imported food has environmental impacts in producing
countries." "Food security is something to think about."
At the end of October, Ichiba Elementary School received soup stock made
by students of Shishikui Elementary School, and good wakame seaweed from
Naruto-higashi Elementary School. These schools are partners in an
educational exchange program. Using the miso paste made in the first
semester, students of Ichiba Elementary School prepared miso soup just
like their ancestors had done, using local seasonal foods and
ingredients they had obtained through trade, as well as homemade
ingredients. In a sense, the students experienced a traditional way of
life. They discovered that there is nothing quite like the aroma from a
newly-opened barrel of handmade miso paste.
In the third semester, students learned about their community's seasonal
vegetables. Mr. Fujimoto thinks that since miso soup is universal in
Japan (with regional variations), it would be an excellent tool for an
educational exchange program across the country. He is proposing to
expand the miso soup project nationwide based on its success in
Tokushima Prefecture.
The campaign "Early to Bed, Early to Rise plus Breakfast" produced a
number of positive results: children became more attentive in classes;
their parents' rhythm of daily life and physical fitness improved; and
people spent more time with their families, building closer
relationships with their neighbors.
Heiwado Declaration to Promote Food Education Activities
Today in Japan consumers can easily buy box lunches, "onigiri" (rice
balls), and ready-to-eat side dishes at supermarkets and convenience
stores. As more people prefer simple and easy-to-prepare meals and
purchase prepared foods, food-related industries are playing in
increasingly important role. Supermarkets are now being expected not
only to sell food, but also to serve as information providers about
products.
Since its establishment in 1957, Heiwado, a general retail chain with 94
stores (headquarters in Hikone, Shiga Prefecture), has been promoting
various food education initiatives to encourage healthy diets for mind
and body. As a food distributor the company considers these activities
as part of its corporate social responsibility.
According to its website and social and environmental report, Heiwado
established a committee for the promotion of food education, and in May
2006 declared on its website that it would promote hands-on food
education activities with the aim of promoting safe food and healthy
living for customers.
Heiwado's activities include (1) encouraging people to eat daily more
than five dishes of vegetables and more than 200 grams of fruit; (2)
disseminating information to improve diets, in collaboration with food
manufacturers; (3) increasing each year the ratio of locally-produced
vegetables at stores, in order to promote the local consumption of local
products; and (4) revitalizing traditions by publishing booklets about
nutrition, traditional Japanese cuisine, and food culture.
Food and diet are intimately connected to our daily lives. Everyone
could benefit by reflecting on our diet and paying more attention to
what we eat each day. And consideration of our own communities and
planet will also lead us toward environmentally-friendly diets. This
article has reported on some of the trends and initiatives happening in
Japan. We hope it will inspire others around the world to support the
idea of food education.
(Written by Eiko Yukawa)
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