Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 635: Teaching Taste: The TASTE–MED Conceptual Framework for a Multisensory Mediterranean Approach to Food Literacy in Adolescence
Nutrients doi: 10.3390/nu18040635
Authors:
Paula Silva
Background/Objectives: Adolescence is pivotal for establishing dietary habits; however, school-based nutritional education remains focused on information dissemination, with minimal effects on behavior modification. Evidence from neuroscience, education, and food literacy indicates that attention, engagement, sensory experiences, and social contexts are integral to effective learning in nutrition education. This article conceptualizes a framework for adolescent food education beyond knowledge transmission, aiming to cultivate taste competence using the Mediterranean Diet as a pedagogical ecosystem. Methods: This study employed a conceptual methodology, utilizing interdisciplinary literature from food literacy, sensory education, developmental neuroscience, educational theory, and public health nutrition. It synthesizes empirical findings and theoretical models to develop the Teaching Autonomous Sensory Taste in the Mediterranean Diet (TASTE–MED) framework. Results: This study introduces taste competence as a multifaceted educational outcome, encompassing sensory, relational, cultural, and reflective dimensions. The TASTE–MED framework outlines how experiential, multisensory, and socially embedded learning processes can be implemented in schools, facilitated by the Mediterranean Diet, which provides a sensory-rich and culturally significant context. The educational implications are discussed in terms of curriculum design, teacher training, family involvement and digital tools. Conclusions: The TASTE–MED framework redefines food literacy as an embodied and socially situated competence rather than a cognitive construct. This framework provides a theoretical foundation for informing the design, evaluation, and research of future interventions, advocating for the transition from information-based nutrition education to competence-oriented food education during adolescence.
Background/Objectives: Adolescence is pivotal for establishing dietary habits; however, school-based nutritional education remains focused on information dissemination, with minimal effects on behavior modification. Evidence from neuroscience, education, and food literacy indicates that attention, engagement, sensory experiences, and social contexts are integral to effective learning in nutrition education. This article conceptualizes a framework for adolescent food education beyond knowledge transmission, aiming to cultivate taste competence using the Mediterranean Diet as a pedagogical ecosystem. Methods: This study employed a conceptual methodology, utilizing interdisciplinary literature from food literacy, sensory education, developmental neuroscience, educational theory, and public health nutrition. It synthesizes empirical findings and theoretical models to develop the Teaching Autonomous Sensory Taste in the Mediterranean Diet (TASTE–MED) framework. Results: This study introduces taste competence as a multifaceted educational outcome, encompassing sensory, relational, cultural, and reflective dimensions. The TASTE–MED framework outlines how experiential, multisensory, and socially embedded learning processes can be implemented in schools, facilitated by the Mediterranean Diet, which provides a sensory-rich and culturally significant context. The educational implications are discussed in terms of curriculum design, teacher training, family involvement and digital tools. Conclusions: The TASTE–MED framework redefines food literacy as an embodied and socially situated competence rather than a cognitive construct. This framework provides a theoretical foundation for informing the design, evaluation, and research of future interventions, advocating for the transition from information-based nutrition education to competence-oriented food education during adolescence. Read More
