50-Minute Classroom: Interview Skills
By Adam Weiner, CFSE
What will a potential employer see if he or she looks up your student on Facebook? This and six other points will help you help your grads find meaningful employment.
With the end of the school year approaching, a number of your students will be out in the job market looking to turn all of their culinary skills (that you taught them) into gainful employment. Now for some painful reality: Unless you teach them how to get and keep a job, all of the technical skills that you have taught are in vain. You might feel that you don’t have time to teach these skills or that they aren’t part of your curriculum. Yet, you must remember that even if your student is potentially the next Bobby Flay, it is useless if he/she can’t get a job and keep that job.
This article will be about how to teach your students to get a job, and the next article will regard teaching how to keep the job.
Mango consumption has nearly quadrupled since 1990 to an estimated 2 pounds per capita annually.
Although only a small percentage of seafood consumed in the United States comes from the Gulf of Mexico, the impact of consumer perception is taking its toll on restaurants, finds Technomic.
The American Culinary Federation Education Foundation (ACFEF) Accrediting Commission, which assures that culinary programs with ACFEF accreditation meet at least a minimum of standards and competencies set for faculty, curriculum and student services, selected three new members to its commission and announced several leadership changes at its biannual meeting held at Lincoln Culinary Institute, West Palm Beach, Fla., Jan. 16, 2011.
The Culinary Institute of America (CIA) has launched a first-of-its-kind course to raise the quality of food served at hospitals and other healthcare facilities nationwide. Foodservice Management in Health Care (MGMT 411) is an elective business-management course for second-semester CIA seniors. It is believed no other college course of this nature is being offered at this time.
Candy Wallace, founder and executive director of the American Personal & Private Chef Association (APPCA), has accepted the invitation to serve on the culinary Program Advisory Committee of The Art Institute of California-San Diego for a one-year term.
Though baking comes with its own rigors and rules, learning international breads expands students’ repertoire and deepens the learning experience.
Mushrooms are the hidden treasure of healthy Hispanic dishes.