Activities
for Module II, Corn, Beans, and Burgers
Activities for Section
A: Field Crops in the food system
Contents:
Activity
1: The Crops on Our Plates
Purpose: Have students analyze
the contribution of major field crops to their
diet.
Advance preparation: Ask students
to bring a week’s itemized grocery receipt
or shopping list and some ingredients labels to
class. You can use the sample grocery receipt
in the curriculum, but the exercise will have
more impact if the students use lists from their
own families.
Estimated time: 15 to 30 minutes
Divide students into small working groups.
Make sure each group has at least one grocery
list to work with.
Ask students what they think the major field
crops of their state are. Explain that 3 crops
(field corn, soybeans, and alfalfa) account for
more than 79% of Wisconsin’s cropland and
more than 87% of Iowa’s cropland.
Ask students to:
- Identify which items in the week’s
groceries come from the 3 major field crops
(note: sweet corn is considered a vegetable
and is not included in the corn acreage.) You
may wish to remind students that sweeteners,
oils, and emulsifiers in processed foods are
mostly derived from corn and soybeans. They
can refer to the labels they brought in to get
an idea of the role of these ingredients.
- Estimate the percentage of their diet supplied
by the 3 major field crops, based on their findings
from the grocery list.
- Assess
the nutritional contribution of field crops
to their diet.
Have each group share its findings with the class
and use class discussion to draw some broader
conclusions.
Suggested points to cover include the following:
- Little of the food we eat is directly supplied
by our principal field crops.
- Field crops indirectly contribute to the food
we eat as livestock feed used to produce dairy
products, eggs, and meat, and as ingredients
in processed foods.
- Corn sweeteners and starches, soy oil and
stabilizers, and other additives derived from
field crops are typically present in small quantities
and add little nutritional value to a diet.
- For most people in the Midwest, foods derived
from field crops account for less than half
of their diet—why is that when well over
half of cropland is devoted to these crops?
(One reason is that we lose 75% to 90% of the
nutritional value of the field crops when they
are fed to animals because it goes to keeping
the livestock alive. Another reason is that
Iowa and Wisconsin export animal products and
import vegetables and grain products for human
consumption).
- Ask if students can think of examples where
principal field crops are also a major direct
component of the local diet. (Rice in much of
Asia, corn in Mexico and Central America, to
a certain extent wheat in the US high plains).
- Do students’ findings track with national
statistics on use of field crops? (see Background,
How do we use these Crops).
Sample Weekly Grocery List
Dumpling
Noodles |
|
Big
Elbow Noodles |
|
Graham
Crackers |
Corn
sweetener (CS), Soy oil (SO) |
Teddy
Grahams |
CS,
SO |
Mostaccioli
|
|
Rice
Cereal |
|
Fruit
Wagon Wheels |
CS
|
Unbleached
Flour |
|
Sugar
|
|
Cheetos
|
SO,
Corn |
NY
Sea Salt Bagel w/Cheese |
|
Mayonnaise
|
SO
|
Instant
Oatmeal |
|
Peanut
Butter: Creamy |
|
Crackers
|
CS
and SO |
Canned
Tomatoes |
|
Tomato
Sauce |
CS?
|
Thick
Sea Salt |
|
Blue
Corn Chips |
Corn,
may be fried in Soy Oil |
Sweet
Potatoes |
|
Bananas
|
|
Large
Ground Turkey |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Chicken
|
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Lemon
|
|
Avocado
|
|
Mangos
|
|
Mini
Peppers |
|
Fresh
Cilantro |
|
Bananas
|
|
Kiwi
Fruit |
|
Red
Bell Peppers |
|
Green
Bell Peppers |
|
Iceberg
Lettuce |
|
Fuji
Apples |
|
Red
Grapes |
|
Pacific
Strawberries |
|
Mushrooms
|
|
Variety
Lettuce |
|
Tomatoes
|
|
Butter
|
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Creamsaver
Yogurt |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Yogurt
|
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Fontena
Cheese |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Sour
Cream |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Cream
Cheese |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
String
Cheese |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Pasta
|
|
Tortillas
|
|
1%
Milk |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Eggo
Nutri-Grain Waffles |
CS
& SO? |
Fruit
by the Foot: Watermelon |
|
Hard
Salami |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Carved
Ham |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
BBQ
Chicken Breast |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Yogurt
Pretzels |
CS
|
Hostess
HoHos |
CS
& SO |
Oat
nut Bread |
CS
|
Sample Weekly Grocery List
Cocoa
Powder |
|
Bread
Baguette |
|
Almonds
|
|
Whole
Wheat Flour |
|
Walnut
Halves |
|
Brie
Cheese |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Canadian
Cheddar Cheese |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Mozzarella
Cheese |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Romano-Pecorino
Cheese |
May
be fed corn and soy meal |
Aged
Cheddar |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Plain
Yogurt |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
2%
Reduced Fat Milk |
Fed
corn and soy meal |
Eggs
|
Fed
corn |
Pasta
|
|
Crushed
Canned Tomatoes |
|
Whole
Canned Tomatoes |
|
Pears
|
|
Oranges
|
|
Avocados
|
|
Tangerines
|
|
Bananas
|
|
Broccoli
|
|
Mushrooms
|
|
Ginger
|
|
Lettuce
|
|
Napa
Cabbage |
|
Yogurt
|
|
Soy
sauce |
Soybeans
|
Frozen
peas |
|
Herb
tea |
|
Tofu
|
Soybeans
|
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Activity
2: How much corn is 2 billion bushels? (optional)
Purpose: Give students better
feel for the amount of corn produced. Short exercise
in math problem solving.
Advance preparation: none
Estimated time: 10 minutes
Ask students to figure out the answer to the
following question:
Iowa’s annual corn harvest is usually around
2 billion bushels. If you loaded semi trucks with
2 billion bushels and lined them up bumper to
bumper, how far would they stretch?
According to the Iowa Department of Transportation,
a large semi holds around 910 bushels, and 879
large semis lined up bumper to bumper would stretch
around 11.5 miles (see http://silosandsmokestacks.org/resources/images/scans/compareDOT.gif).
Answer: The line of trucks would
stretch 29,206 miles, or more than the circumference
of the earth (which is a little under 25,000 miles).
Luckily, most grain is transported much more efficiently
in railroad cars and on barges.
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Activity
3: A Look at Processing and Distribution
Purpose: Have students explore
the complexity of processing of field crops and
learn how hard it is for consumers to find out
where their food comes from and who controls processing
and distribution.
Advance preparation: Have each
small group bring an example of a food containing
one or more of the principal field crops to class.
Or develop a list of foods containing field crop
ingredients (see http://www.soystats.com/2003/Default-frames.htm for information on soy products and http://www.iowacorn.org/cornuse/cornuse_6.html
for examples of foods with corn-based ingredients).
Print out a copy of the flowchart
for a soft drink (MS Word Document).
Estimated time: 15 minutes to
one hour or more
Break students into small groups. Assign each
group a different food derived at least in part
from one of the state’s main field crops.
If students have brought sample foods to class,
have the groups use those items.
Show students the sample flowchart for a soft
drink.
Ask each group to identify the steps and actors
involved in moving the field crop(s) to the final
product for their food item. Ask them to develop
a “field to plate” flow chart for
it and present the chart to the class.
Your students will probably have trouble filling
in the flow chart. Most people know very little
about food processing and distribution, and the
information is difficult to obtain. This even
applies to many people employed in food processing,
as well as the general public.
Students can begin by brainstorming what the likely
processing and transportation stages are and what
companies might be involved. If time allows, they
can follow up these guesses with research. They
can try looking on the internet, they can try
to contact the company listed on the product label,
and/or they can try to track the product back
from the point of purchase. In the amount of time
students have available, they will probably only
be able to get general information, not specifics
about the origin of a particular food item.
In many cases, companies are reluctant to share
detailed information about the processing and
movement of their products, though they may publicize
generic production information. For example, development
of the flow chart for the path of corn to high
fructose corn syrup to soda in a grocery store
took about 50 phone calls over a period of months.
A few company spokespeople shared information
willingly, but others failed to return phone calls
or refused outright to divulge the information.
Why do this exercise if students won’t
get the answers?
They will begin to think about the various stages
in the food system.
They will learn that food does not simply arrive
at the grocery store straight from farms, but
that in between it is handled by a number of different
people, even if it is difficult to find out who
exactly those people are.
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