1 / 12

The Food “Pyramid”

The Food “Pyramid”. Changes Over the Last Century. 1916: Food For Young Children. USDA first food guide Food classified into five groups: Cereals Veggies and Fruits Milk and Meat Fats and Fatty Foods Sugars and Sugary Foods. 1917: How To Select Foods. Came out one year later

hao
Télécharger la présentation

The Food “Pyramid”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Food “Pyramid” Changes Over the Last Century

  2. 1916: Food For Young Children • USDA first food guide • Food classified into five groups: • Cereals • Veggies and Fruits • Milk and Meat • Fats and Fatty Foods • Sugars and Sugary Foods

  3. 1917: How To Select Foods • Came out one year later • Expanded the food guide into a 14 page pamphlet

  4. 1943: The Basic Seven • Suggested number of servings per food group • Did not include serving sizes • Included seven food groups • milk and milk products • meat, poultry, fish, eggs, beans, peas and nuts • bread, flour and cereals • leafy green and yellow vegetables • potatoes and sweet potatoes • citrus, tomato, cabbage and salad greens • butter and margarine

  5. 1956: The Basic Four • Simplified the “Basic Seven” • Included serving sizes in four food groups • Milk • Meat • Veggies and Fruits • Grain

  6. 1979: Hassle-Free Guide To A Better Diet • Kept the “Basic Four” • Added moderate consumption of an additional group: Fats, sweets, and alcohol

  7. 1984: Food Wheel – A Pattern For Daily Food Choices • A collaboration of the USDA and the Red Cross • Included amounts of foods for three different calorie levels

  8. 1992: Food Guide Pyramid • The one most people remember • Split the servings into proportions of a pyramid • What could be some problems with this model?

  9. 2005: MyPyramid Food Guidance System • Simplified the food pyramid • Added a band for oils • Includes representation of physical activity • What are some advantages and disadvantages for this model?

  10. Iconic food guide easier to measure servings for each group • Emphasizes five food groups: • Grains • Fruits • Veggies • Protein (not meats) • Dairy (not milk) • What are the major changes between this model and the MyPyramid model? Why were these changes made? 2011: MyPlate

  11. How does this relate to Visual Rhetoric? • The food guide has changed to fit the purposes of nutrition today • Healthy eating and exercise are emphasized today • MyPlate is available online as a “nutrition tracker” to fit with the advancements in technology • The “Basic Seven” are no longer appropriate for the purposes of nutrition today • MyPlate offers more of an appeal to the eye than the data and facts listed in earlier food guides

  12. How does this help me understand Visual Rhetoric? • Certain visuals are inappropriate for certain purposes (The “Basic Seven” are not appropriate for today’s nutrition standards) • Make sure your visuals fit your purpose • There are good visuals and appropriate visuals…Use the latter!

More Related