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PA Bulletin, Doc. No. 02-253b

[32 Pa.B. 882]

[Continued from previous Web Page]

XXX.  GLOSSARY

Abstinence: Choosing not to do something or completely giving something up in order to gain something.
Acute illness: A health condition of sudden onset, sharp rises and short course.
Adolescence: The period of life beginning with puberty and ending with completed growth.
Aerobic: Physical activity or exercise done at a steady pace for an extended period of time so that the heart can supply as much oxygen as the body needs (e.g., walking, running, swimming, cycling).
Agility: A component of physical fitness that relates to the ability to rapidly change the position of the entire body in space with speed and accuracy.
AIDS Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome: a condition that results when infection with HIV causes a breakdown of the body's ability to fight other infections.
Allergen: A substance that stimulates the production of antibodies and subsequently results in allergic reactions (e.g., mold spores, cat/dog dander, dust).
Anaerobic: Physical activity or exercise done in short, fast bursts so that the heart cannot supply oxygen as fast as the body needs (e.g., 100-yard dash, basketball, football).
Assertive: The expression of thoughts and feelings without experiencing anxiety or threatening others.
Automatic Stage of Learning: Movement responses flow and the individual can focus on what to do without thinking about it.
Balance: A skill-related component of physical fitness that relates to the maintenance of equilibrium while stationery or moving.
Biomechanics: The science concerned with the action of forces, internal or external, on the living body.
Body composition: A health-related component of physical fitness that relates to the percentage of fat tissue and lean tissue in the body.
Body systems: Anatomically or functionally related parts of the body (e.g., skeletal, nervous, immune, circulatory systems).
Caloric content: The amount of energy supplied by food. The more calories in the food, the more fattening.
Cardiorespiratory endurance: A health related component of physical fitness relating to the ability of the circulatory and respiratory systems to supply oxygen during sustained physical activity.
Centrifugal: The force that seems to pull an object away from the center as it moves in a circle.
Centripetal: The force that is required to keep an object moving around a circular path.
Chronic illness: A health condition of long duration or frequent recurrence.
Circuit training: Exercise program, similar to an obstacle course, in which the person goes from one place to another doing a different exercise at each place.
Closed: Skills that are performed in an environment that does not change or that changes very little, such as archery or the foul shot in basketball.
Communicable: Illness caused by pathogens that enter the body through direct or indirect contact and can be transmitted from one host to another.
Continuous: Two or more repetitions of the same skill such as dribbling in basketball or soccer.
Cool-down: Brief, mild exercise done after vigorous exercise to help the body safely return to a resting state.
Coordination: A skill-related component of physical fitness that relates to the ability to use the senses together with body parts in performing motor tasks smoothly and accurately.
CPR: A first aid technique, which involves rescue breathing and chest (heart) compressions, that is used to revive a person whose heart has stopped beating.
Critical elements: The important parts of a skill.
Decision-making process: An organized approach to making choices.
Developmental differences: Learners are at different levels in their motor, cognitive, emotional, social and physical development. The learners developmental status will affect their ability to learn or improve.
Developmentally appropriate: Motor skill development and change occur in an orderly, sequential fashion and is age and experience related.
Directions: Forward, backward, left, right, up, down.
Discrete: Single skill performed in isolation from other motor skills such as the soccer penalty kick and golf stroke.
Dynamic balance: Equilibrium used when in motion, starting and stopping.
Eating disorders: Food-related dysfunction in which a person changes eating habits in a way that is harmful to the mind or body (e.g., bulimia, anorexia nervosa).
Efficiency of movement: The state or quality of competence in performance with minimum expenditure of time and effort.
Equilibrium: State in which there is no change in the motion of a body.
Feedback: Information given to the learner about how to improve or correct a movement.
Flexibility: A health-related component of physical fitness that relates to the range of motion available at a joint.
Food guide pyramid: A visual tool used to help people plan healthy diet according to the Dietary Guidelines for America.
Force: Any external agent that causes a change in the motion of a body.
Form: Manner or style of performing a movement according to recognized standards of technique.
Good performance: The ability to correctly select what to do and the ability to execute the selection appropriately.
Health: A state of complete physical, mental and social well-being; not merely the absence of disease and infirmity.
Health education: Planned, sequential K--12 program of curricula and instruction that helps students develop knowledge, attitudes and skills related to the physical, mental, emotional and social dimensions of health.
Health-related fitness: Components of physical fitness that have a relationship with good health. Components are cardiorespiratory endurance, muscular strength and endurance, flexibility and body composition.
Heimlich maneuver: A first aid technique that is used to relieve complete airway obstruction.
HIV: Human immunodeficiency virus that infects cells of the immune system and other tissues and causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
I-statement: A statement describing a specific behavior or event and the effect that behavior or event has on a person and the feelings that result.
Inertia: A body at rest will remain at rest and a body in motion will remain in motion unless acted upon by a force.
Inhalant: Chemicals that produce vapors that act on the central nervous system and alter a user's moods, perceptions, feelings, personality and behavior such as airplane glue and aerosols.
Integumentary system: Body system composed of the skin, hair, nails and glands.
Intensity: How hard a person should exercise to improve fitness.
Interval training: An anaerobic exercise program that consists of runs of short distance followed by rest.
Kinetic: Energy that an object possesses because it is moving, such as a pitched baseball or a person running.
Levels: Positions of the body (e.g., high, medium, low).
Linear motion: Movement which occurs in a straight path.
Locomotor movement: Movements producing physical displacement of the body, usually identified by weight transference via the feet. Basic locomotor steps are the walk, run, hop and jump as well as the irregular rhythmic combinations of the skip, slide and gallop.
Long-term memory: Ability to recall information that was learned days or even years ago.
Manipulative movements: Control of objects with body parts and implements. Action causes an object to move from one place to another.
Mechanical advantage: The ratio between the force put into a machine and the force that comes out of the same machine.
Moderate physical activity: Sustained, repetitive, large muscle movements (e.g., walking, running, cycling) done at less than 60% of maximum heart rate for age. Maximum heart rate is 220 beats per minute minus participant's age.
Motor skills: Non-fitness abilities that improve with practice and relate to one's ability to perform specific sports and other motor tasks (e.g., tennis serve, shooting a basketball).
Motor stage of learning: Individual is working to perfect the motor skill and makes conscious adjustments to the environment.
Movement skills: Proficiency in performing nonlocomotor, locomotor and manipulative movements that are the foundation for participation in physical activities.
Muscular endurance: A health-related component of physical fitness that relates to the ability of a muscle to continue to perform without fatigue.
Muscular strength: A health-related component of physical fitness that relates to the ability of the muscle to exert force.
Newton's Laws of Motion: Three laws by Sir Isaac Newton that explain the relations between force and the motions produced by them: The Law of Inertia, Force and Acceleration, Reacting Forces.
Noncommunicable: Illness that is not caused by a pathogen that is not transmitted from one host to another.
Nonlocomotor movement: Movements that do not produce physical displacement of the body.
Nutrient: A basic component of food that nourishes the body.
Open: Skill is performed in an environment that varies or is unpredictable such as the tennis forehand or the soccer pass.
Overload: A principle of exercise that states that the only way to improve fitness is to exercise more than the normal.
Pathways: Patterns of travel while performing locomotor movements (e.g., straight, curved, zigzag).
Physical activity: Bodily movement that is produced by the contraction of skeletal muscle and which substantially increases energy expenditure.
Physical education: Planned, sequential, movement-based program of curricula and instruction that helps students develop knowledge, attitudes, motor skills, self-management skills and confidence needed to adapt and maintain a physically active life.
Physical fitness: A set of attributes that people have or achieve and that relate to their ability to perform physical activity. Generally accepted to consist of health-related fitness and skill-related fitness.
Potential: Energy stored in a body because of its position such as the crouch position prior to a jump.
Power: A skill-related component of physical fitness that relates to the rate at which one can perform work.
Principles of exercise: Guidelines to follow to obtain the maximum benefits from physical activity and exercise.
Principles of training: Guidelines to follow to obtain the maximum benefits from an exercise plan.
Progression: A principle of exercise that states that a person should start slowly and increase exercise gradually.
Reaction time: A skill-related component of physical fitness that relates to the time elapsed between stimulation and the beginning of the response to it.
Reflective listening: An active listening skill in which the individual lets others know he/she has heard and understands what has been said.
Refusal strategies: Systematic ways to handle situations in which a person wants to say no to an action and/or leave an environment that threatens health or safety, breaks laws, results in lack of respect for self and others or disobeys guidelines set by responsible adults.
Repetitions: Number of times an exercise is repeated.
Rescue breathing: Technique used to supply air to an individual who is not breathing.
Rotary motion: Force that produces movement that occurs around an axis or center point such as a somersault.
Safety education: Planned, sequential program of curricula and instruction that helps students develop the knowledge, attitudes and confidence needed to protect them from injury.
Self-space: All the space that the body or its parts can reach without traveling from a starting location.
Serial: Two or more different skills performed with each other such as fielding a ball and throwing it or dribbling a basketball and shooting it.
Set: A group of several repetitions.
Short-term memory: Ability to recall recently learned information, such as within the past few seconds or minutes.
Skill-related fitness: Consists of components of physical fitness that have a relationship with enhanced performance in sports and motor skills. The components are agility, balance, coordination, power, reaction time and speed.
Specificity: A principle of exercise that states that specific kinds of exercises must be done to develop specific aspects of the body and specific aspects of fitness.
Speed: A skill-related component of physical fitness that relates to the ability to perform a movement or cover a distance in a short period of time.
Static balance: Maintaining equilibrium while holding a pose or remaining motionless.
STD: Sexually transmitted disease.
Universal precautions: An approach to infection control. All human blood and body fluids are treated as if known to be infectious.
Warm-up: Brief, mild exercise that is done to get ready for more vigorous exercise.
Verbal cognitive stage of learning: The individual is attempting to move from verbal instruction to trying to figure out how to actually do the skill. The first attempts at the skill are generally mechanical and success is inconsistent. The individual thinks through each step of the movement.
Vigorous physical activity: Sustained, repetitive, large muscle movements (e.g., running, swimming, soccer) done at 60% or more of maximum heart rate for age. Maximum heart rate is 220 beats per minute minus the participant's age. Activity makes person sweat and breathe hard.

Proposed Academic Standards for Family and Consumer Sciences

XXXI.  TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction XXXII.
THE ACADEMIC STANDARDS
Financial and Resource Management 11.1.
A.  Resource Management
B.  Spending Plan
C.  Housing
D.  Consumer Rights and Responsibilities
E.  Income
F.  Purchasing
G.  Services
Balancing Family, Work and Community Responsibility 11.2.
A.  Practical Reasoning
B.  Action Plans
C.  Team Building
D.  Space Planning
E.  Technology
F.  Family Functions
G.  Family Life Cycle
H.  Communications
Food Science and Nutrition 11.3.
A.  Food Supply
B.  Safety and Sanitation
C.  Nutrient Analysis
D.  Nutrition and Health
E.  Calories and Energy
F.  Meal Management
G.  Food Science
Child Development 11.4.
A.  Developmental Stages
B.  Health and Safety
C.  Learning Environments
D.  School Involvement
E.  Literacy
Glossary XXXIII.

XXXII.  INTRODUCTION

   This document includes proposed Academic Standards for Family and Consumer Sciences at four grade levels (third, sixth, ninth and twelfth) with the emphasis on what students will know and be able to do in the following areas:

   * 11.1.  Financial and Resource Management

   * 11.2.  Balancing Family, Work, and Community Responsibility

   * 11.3.  Food Science and Nutrition

   * 11.4.  Child Development.

   The focus of the Academic Standards for Family and Consumer Sciences education is the individual, the family and the community. The economic, social and political well-being of our state depends on the well-being of Pennsylvania's families. The family is responsible for nurturing its members. Family experiences, to a great extent, determine who a person is and what a person becomes. Family and Consumer Sciences, working with Pennsylvania's families, supports the development of the knowledge and skills that students need as family members both now and in the future. The 21st Century requires students to develop the ability to transform information into knowledge by using standards to certify that this information is meaningful, categorizing it to a purpose and then transforming their knowledge into wisdom by applying it to real life.

   Family and Consumer Sciences is a discipline composed of strong subject matter concentrations with a commitment to integration. Concepts form a framework for learning based on these tenets:

   * Families are the fundamental unit of society.

   * A life-span approach to individual and family development contributes to creating lifelong learners.

   * Meeting individual and family needs inside and outside the home are shared responsibilities.

   * Individual, family and community well-being is strengthened through an awareness of diversity.

   * The use of diverse modes of inquiry strengthens intellectual development.

   * The content learning in Family and Consumer Sciences classes' enhances the mastery of academic standards.

   * Standards-based learning within Family and Consumer Sciences' classrooms can best be demonstrated through performance based assessment.

   Learners in Family and Consumer Sciences nurture themselves and others, taking increased responsibility for improving their quality of living.

   The Proposed Academic Standards for Family and Consumer Sciences are written to empower individuals and families to manage the challenges of living and working in a diverse, global society. These Proposed Academic Standards address the functioning of families and their interrelationships with work, community and society. The focus is on the recurring, practical problems of individuals and families. An integrative approach is used to help individuals and families identify, create and evaluate goals and alternative solutions to significant problems of everyday life. Students are taught to take responsibility for the consequences of their actions. Comprehensive classroom experiences allow students to develop the knowledge and skills needed in making choices to meet their personal, family and work responsibilities.

   A glossary is included to assist the reader in understanding terminology contained in the standards.

11.1.  Financial and Resource Management
11.1.3.  GRADE 3 11.1.6.  GRADE 6 11.1.9.  GRADE 9 11.1.12.  GRADE 12
Pennsylvania's public schools shall teach, challenge and support every student to realize his or her maximum potential and to acquire the knowledge and skills needed to . . .
A.  Identify money denominations, services and material resources available as trade-offs within the home, school and community. A.  Justify the decision to use or not use resources based on scarcity. A.  Analyze current conservation practices and their effect on future renewable and non-renewable resources.
* Refuse
* Reduce
* Reuse
* Recycle
A.  Evaluate the impact of family resource management on the global community.
B.  Define the components of a spending plan (e.g., income, expenses, savings).
B.  Know the relationship of the components of a simple spending plan and how that relationship allows for managing income, expenses and savings.
B.  Explain the responsibilities associated with managing personal finances (e.g., savings, checking, credit, noncash systems, investments).
B.  Analyze the management of financial resources across the lifespan.
C.  Explain the need for shelter for the purpose of safety, warmth and comfort.
C.  Describe the adaptability to meet basic human needs of the different types of housing available (e.g., single home, apartment, mobile home, shelter, recreational vehicle, public housing).
C.  Delineate and assess the factors affecting the availability of housing (e.g., supply and demand, market factors, geographical location, community regulations). C.  Analyze the relationship among factors affecting consumer housing decisions (e.g., human needs, financial resources, location, legal agreements, maintenance responsibilities).
D.  Explain consumer rights and responsibilities.
* To be safe
* To be informed
* To be heard
* To choose
* To redress
D.  Analyze information in care instructions, safety precautions and the use of consumable goods as a demonstration of understanding of consumer rights and responsibilities. D.  Explain how consumer rights and responsibilities are protected (e.g., government agencies, consumer protection agencies, consumer action groups). D.  Evaluate the role of consumer rights and responsibilities in the resolution of a consumer problem through the practical reasoning process.
E.  Explain the relationship between work and income. E.  Explain the principles of child labor laws and the opportunity cost of working by evaluating the advantages and disadvantages of holding a job while a teenager. E.  Compare the influences of income and fringe benefits to make decisions about work. E.  Compare and contrast factors affecting annual gross and taxable income and reporting requirements (e.g., W-2 form, Income tax form).
F.  Describe criteria needed to identify quality in consumer goods and services (e.g., food, clothing, furniture, home technology, health care, transportation, services). F.  Explain practices to maintain and/or repair consumer goods and services. F.  Evaluate different strategies to obtain consumer goods and services. F.  Compare and contrast the selection of goods and services by applying effective consumer strategies.
G.  Identify the services that communities provide for individuals and families. G.  Identify the public and nonpublic services that are available to serve families within the community. G.  Analyze how public, nonpublic and for-profit service providers serve the family. G.  Compare the availability, costs and benefits of accessing public, nonpublic and for-profit services to assist the family.
11.2.  Balancing Family, Work and Community Responsibility
11.2.3.  GRADE 3 11.2.6.  GRADE 6 11.2.9.  GRADE 9 11.2.12.  GRADE 12
Pennsylvania's public schools shall teach, challenge and support every student to realize his or her maximum potential and to acquire the knowledge and skills needed to . . .
A.  Examine consequences of family, work or career decisions. A.  Contrast the solutions reached through the use of a simple decision making process that includes analyzing consequences of alternative solutions against snap decision making methods. A.  Solve dilemmas using a practical reasoning approach
* Identify situation
* Identify reliable information
* List choices and examine the consequences of each
* Develop a plan of action
* Draw conclusions
* Reflect on decisions
A.  Justify solutions developed by using practical reasoning skills.
B.  Identify the importance of routines and schedules while differentiating between short and long term goals. B.  Deduce the importance of time management skills (e.g. home, school, recreational activities). B.  Know FCCLA action planning procedure and how to apply it to family, work and community decisions. B.  Evaluate the effectiveness of action plans that integrate personal, work, family and community responsibilities.
C.  Indicate the benefits and costs of working as an individual or as a team member and of being a leader or follower. C.  Classify the components of effective teamwork and leadership. C.  Assess the effectiveness of the use of teamwork and leadership skills in accomplishing the work of the family. C.  Analyze teamwork and leadership skills and their application in various family and work situations.
D.  Explain the importance of organizing space for efficiency and a sense of comfort (e.g., desk space, classroom space). D.  Identify the concepts and principles used in planning space for activities. D.  Analyze the space requirements for a specified activity to meet a given need (e.g., family room, home office, kitchen). D.  Based on efficiency, aesthetics and psychology, evaluate space plans (e.g., home, office, work areas) for their ability to meet a variety of needs including those of individuals with special needs.
E.  Analyze the effectiveness of technology used for school and home in accomplishing the work of the family (e.g., security, entertainment, communication, education). E.  Describe the role of technology within a community in maintaining a safe and healthy living environment (e.g., safety, hospitals, waste treatment, water quality, schools). E.  Evaluate the impact of technology and justify the use or nonuse of it (e.g., safety, cost/budget, appearance, efficiency). E.  Assess the availability of emerging technology that is designed to do the work of the family and evaluate the impact of its use on individuals, families and communities.
F.  Explain daily activities that fulfill family functions in meeting responsibilities (e.g., economic, emotional support, childcare and guidance, housekeeping, maintaining kinship, providing recreation). F.  Compare and contrast how different cultures meet family responsibilities within differing configurations (e.g., new parent, just married, single adult living alone, ''empty nest,'' retired, senior citizen). F.  Contrast past and present family functions and predict their probable impact on the future of the family. F.  Assess the relationship of family functions to human developmental stages.
G.  Identify the life stages by identifying their developmental task (e.g., infant, pre-schooler, school age, teen-age, adult, senior citizen). G.  Identify the characteristics of the stages of the family life cycle (e.g., beginning, expanding, developing, launching, middle years, retirement, variations). G.  Explain the influences of family life cycle stages on the needs of families and communities (e.g., a large number of young families needing day care, fixed income senior citizens, school age children). G.  Hypothesize the impact
of present family life-cycle trends on the global community (e.g., over population, increase in
an aging population, economic base).
H.  Identify how to resolve conflict using interpersonal communications skills.
* Speaking and listening
* I messages
* Active listening
* Checking for understanding
* Following directions
* Empathy
* Feedback
H.  Describe positive and negative interactions within patterns of interpersonal communications.
* Placating
* Blaming
* Distracting
* Intellectualizing
* Asserting
H.  Justify the significance of interpersonal communication skills in the practical reasoning method of decision making. H.  Evaluate the effectiveness of using interpersonal communication skills to resolve conflict.
11.3.  Food Science and Nutrition
11.3.3.  GRADE 3 11.3.6.  GRADE 6 11.3.9.  GRADE 9 11.3.12.  GRADE 12
Pennsylvania's public schools shall teach, challenge and support every student to realize his or her maximum potential and to acquire the knowledge and skills needed to . . .
A.  Know the production steps that a food travels from the farm to the consumer. A.  Demonstrate knowledge of techniques used to evaluate food in various forms (e.g., canned, frozen, dried, irradiated). A.  Explain how scientific and technological developments enhance our food supply (e.g., food preservation techniques, packaging, nutrient fortification). A.  Analyze how food engineering and technology trends will influence the food supply.
B.  Describe personal hygiene techniques in food handling (e.g., handwashing, sneeze control, signs of food spoilage). B.  Describe safe food handling techniques (e.g., storage, temperature control, food preparation, conditions that create a safe working environment for food production). B.  Identify the cause, effect and prevention of microbial contamination, parasites and toxic chemicals in food. B.  Evaluate the role of Government agencies in safeguarding our food supply (e.g., USDA, FDA, EPA and CDC).
C.  Explain the importance of eating a varied diet in maintaining health. C.  Analyze factors that effect food choices. C.  Analyze the impact of food addictions and eating disorders on health. C.  Evaluate sources of food and nutrition information.
D.  Classify foods by food group within the food guide pyramid including the serving size and nutrient function within the body. D.  Describe a well-balanced daily menu using the dietary guidelines and the food guide pyramid. D.  Analyze relationship between diet and disease and risk factors (e.g., calcium and osteoporosis; fat, cholesterol and heart disease; folate and birth defects; sodium and hypertension). D.  Critique diet modifications for their ability to improve nutritionally-related health conditions (e.g., diabetes, lactose-intolerance, iron deficiency).
E.  Define energy-yielding nutrients and calories. E.  Explain the relationship between calories, nutrient and food input versus energy output; describe digestion. E.  Analyze the energy requirements, nutrient requirements and body composition for individuals at various stages of the life cycle. E.  Analyze the breakdown of foods, absorption of nutrients and their conversion to energy by the body.
F.  Identify components of a basic recipe (e.g., volume, weight, fractions, recipe ingredients, recipe directions, safety techniques). F.  Analyze basic food preparation techniques and food-handling procedures. F.  Hypothesize the effectiveness of the use of meal management principles (e.g., time management, budgetary considerations, sensory appeal, balanced nutrition, safety, sanitation). F.  Evaluate the application of nutrition and meal planning principles in the selection, planning, preparation and serving of meals that meet the specific nutritional needs of individuals across their lifespan.
G.  Classify foods according to senses (e.g., taste, touch, smell, mouth feel, sight, sound). G.  Describe the physical, biological, and chemical changes that take place in food preparation. G.  Analyze the application of physical and chemical changes that occur in food during preparation and preservation. G.  Analyze the relevance of scientific principles to food processing, preparation and packaging.
11.4.  Child Development
11.4.3.  GRADE 3 11.4.6.  GRADE 6 11.4.9.  GRADE 9 11.4.12.  GRADE 12
Pennsylvania's public schools shall teach, challenge and support every student to realize his or her maximum potential and to acquire the knowledge and skills needed to. . .
A.  Identify characteristics in each stage of child development.
* Infancy
* Early childhood
* Middle childhood
* Late childhood
* Adolescence
A.  Compare and contrast child development guided practices according to the stage of child developmental. A.  Analyze physical, intellectual and social/emotional development in relation to theories of child development. A.  Analyze current research on existing theories in child development and its impact on parenting (e.g., Piaget, Erikson and prior findings versus new brain development research).
B.  Identify health and safety needs for children at each stage of child development. B.  Identify ways to keep children healthy and safe at each stage of child development. B.  Evaluate health and safety hazards relating to children at each stage of child development. B.  Analyze current issues in health and safety affecting children at each stage of child development.
C.  Identify the characteristics of a learning environment. C.  Identify the role of the caregiver in providing a learning environment (e.g., baby-sitting, daycare, preschool). C.  Evaluate various environments to determine if they provide the characteristics of a proper learning environment. C.  Analyze practices that optimize child development (e.g., stimulation, safe environment, nurturing caregivers, reading to children).
D.  Identify community resources provided for children. D.  Identify considerations prior to selecting childcare providers. D.  Analyze the roles, responsibilities and opportunity for family involvement in schools.
D.  Analyze plans and methods to blend work and family responsibilities to meet the needs of children.
E.  Explain how the home and community help a person learn to read, write and compute. E.  Identify characteristics of quality literature for children and other literacy enhancing activities. E.  Explain how storytelling, story reading and writing enhance literacy development in children. E.  Identify practices that develop the child's imagination, creativity and reading and writing skills through literature.

XXXIII.  GLOSSARY

Aesthetics: Appreciation of and responsive to beauty.
CDC: Center for Disease Control
Child-care provider considerations: Criteria to use in evaluating child care facilities. These include well-trained and highly motivated staff, pleasant sanitary surroundings, variety in toys and supplies, ratio of staff to children.
Child development stage: An age range with similar growth characteristics: infancy, toddler, preschooler, school age, adolescent.
Consumer responsibilities: The need to interpret information in care instructions, safety precautions and proper use of consumable goods as a user of goods and services.
Consumer rights: The guarantee to be safe, the right to be informed, to be heard, to choose consumer education and to redress as a user of goods and services.
Dietary guidelines: A set of seven recommendations developed by the United States Department of Agriculture and Health and Human Services to help healthy people over age 2 know what to eat to stay healthy.
Developmental tasks: Changes in the thinking and behavior of individuals over time.
Empathy: The action of understanding another's thoughts, feelings and behaviors.
EPA: Environmental Protection Agency
FCCLA Action planning procedure: The decision making process endorsed by the Family, Career and Community Leaders of America, involving five steps:
1. Identify concerns--brainstorm and evaluate, narrow choices to workable ideas.
2. Set your goals--write what you want to accomplish as an achievable objective.
3. Form a plan--who, what, when, where and how.
4. Act--carry out the plan.
5. Follow up--determine if your goal was met and create an improvement plan.
FDA: Food and Drug Administration
Family, Career and: Community Leaders Of America: Vocational student organization sponsored by Family and Consumer Sciences classrooms.
Food guide pyramid: A visual tool used to help people plan healthy diets according to the Dietary Guidelines for America.
Guided practices: Interaction with a child based on age appropriate developmental principles.
I message: A statement containing three parts:
1. The situation
2. How it makes the speaker feel
3. What will happen if it continues.
Kinship: Relationships or relatives.
Leadership skills: The ability to:
* Use resources
* Delegate authority
* Communicate effectively
* Assess composition of group
* Determine and rank goals
* Evaluate consequences.
Microbial contamination: Most common food contaminants causing foodborne illnesses.
Nutrient: A basic component of food that nourishes the body.
Opportunity cost: The highest valued alternative given up when a decision is made.
Practical reasoning: A decision making process unique because of its emphasis on relationships and involving six steps:
1. Identify situation to be solved
2. Identify reliable information
3. List choices and examine consequences
4. Develop plan of action
5. Draw conclusions
6. Reflect on decisions.
Redress: To set right or remedy.
Toxic chemical: Contaminants found in natural, environmental and pesticide residue forms that are poisonous to the body.
Scarcity: The lack of provisions for the support of life.
Team work skills: The ability to:
* Collaborate
* Cooperate
* Set community goals
* Reach consensus.
Trade-off: Exchange of goods, services or moneys.
USDA: United States Department of Agriculture
[Pa.B. Doc. No. 02-253. Filed for public inspection February 15, 2002, 9:00 a.m.]



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