COURSES At the University of Gastronomic Sciences



Similar documents
9 th TRAINING PROGRAM IN SPANISH GASTRONOMY AND TAPAS 2016

ESHTE Degrees PLEASE READ THE SPECIAL INFO AT THE END OF THIS DOCUMENT REGARDING SPECIFIC SUBJECTS

The total duration of the program will be 21 weeks split as follows:

How To Become A Chef At Diablo Valley College

Le Cordon Bleu Master of Gastronomic Tourism. Explore the world of gastronomy & tourism TASTE PLACE

Bachelor s degree in Food Technology. Study programme 6 semesters to a Bachelor s degree page 4

2-YEAR FULL-TIME CULINARY ARTS DIPLOMA COURSE PROSPECTUS: 2017

O4W1602APP780 WSET Diploma Online

CULINARY TRAINING PROGRAM FOR FOREIGN PROFESSIONALS IN SPANISH GASTRONOMY Program

Hospitality and Tourism 2016 PROGRAMMES

Contents. Page 1 of 27

Entrepreneurship for Food and Wine

1. PROMOTION OF FOOD AND DRINK PRODUCTS AND OF THE TERRITORY

Craft Guild of Chefs Programmes

EMBARK ON A JOURNEY OF CULINARY DISCOVERY AND UNCOVER THE SECRETS OF THE WORLD S MOST POPULAR CUISINES.

SCHOOL OF FOOD, HOSPITALITY & TOURISM

ADDRESS TO: THE PERSON WHO IS KEEN ON SPANISH GATRONOMY. TOTAL DURATION: 2 weeks

Available fields of study for: University of Milan School of Language Mediation and Intercultural Communication Italy

Welcome to a world of opportunities in the Faculty of Agricultural and Food Sciences!

THE ITALIAN SCHOOL SYSTEM. by Krisnel Nosari I.S. E.Fermi Mantua Italy

ARE ENTREPRENEURS BORN OR MADE? AMWAY GLOBAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP REPORT ITALY AND UNITED STATES IN COMPARISON

DIABLO VALLEY COLLEGE CATALOG

CULINARY ARTS PROGRAM BACKGROUNDER

ALMA THE INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL OF ITALIAN CUISINE

Nottingham Trent University Course Specification

Capitalize on Culinary Experiences!

GRAND RAPIDS COMMUNITY COLLEGE

Le Cordon Bleu Bachelor Degrees The Art of Conversation

INTERVENCIÓN DEL MINISTRO DE INDUSTRIA, TURISMO Y COMERCIO

THE TRAVELLER ON TOUR ROME.

Cooking ~ Pastry ~ Wine Programs in France!

Culinary/Food Tourism Growing Pure Michigan!

SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES DOUBLE DEGREE: INTERNATIONAL HOSPITALITY AND TOURISM MANAGEMENT + MARKETING AND COMMERCIAL MANAGEMENT

ISA Engineering Program. Catalog of Courses. Academic year First year (all classes are all year long)

WE ARE HOSPITALITY. University Master Degree (EHEA) HOTEL MANAGEMENT. HTSI is affiliated to the ESADE Foundation

How To Get A Social Work Degree In Hku.Hku.Hk

Policy for the Organization of Curricula for Undergraduate Degrees. Policy for the Management of Curricula for Undergraduate Degrees

Supporting competitive and Sustainable Growth in the Tourism Sector

FACT SHEET. SWISS BELHOTEL INTL CULINARY APPRENTICESHIP and SHML DIPLOMA IN HOTEL OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT

experienced faculty intensive nurturing your spirit world-class facilities

Cambridge AICE Diploma A passport to success in education, university and work

The 10 Best Graduate Programs In Urban And Regional Planning

How To Manage A Hotel And Restaurant

Chef Andrew Mitchell s BIOGRAPHY

Company Profile. Luca and Urbano, November 2006

Bachelor in Culinary Arts EXCELLENCE IN PRACTICE

APPROVED EDEXCEL BTEC CENTRE

Value of production of agricultural products and foodstuffs, wines, aromatised wines and spirits protected by a geographical indication (GI)

STUDY IN FRANCE THIS SUMMER 2012

Certification Requirements by Discipline. Allied Health Sciences

Journals for Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education

BE VET, BE DIFFERENT. let s work together towards the future!

FRENCH CUISINE / FRENCH PASTRY. Turn your passion into a career

Teacher Education in China : Current Situation & Related Issues

DISTANCE LEARNING PROGRAMME COURSE SYLLABUS UNIVERSITY DIPLOMA IN RURAL DEVELOPMENT BY DISTANCE LEARNING

Healthy People 2020 and Education For Health Successful Practices in Undergraduate Public Health Programs

THREE-YEAR COURSES VISUAL & MULTIMEDIA DESIGN

Contents. Why choose Film Studies at Liverpool? 01 Degrees 03 Example student timetable 04 Module details 06 Honours Select 08

food tourism october 2014 Culinary experiences as a means of travelling and discovering countries

Experience the Art of Success

New York Report. By Ellen Bee OCTOBER 2010

ACADEMIC PROGRAMS SERVING WASHINGTON S WINE INDUSTRY Public Colleges & Universities Credential Program Description School Location Contact

MASTER S IN FOOD STUDIES FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQS)

C A R E E R C L U S T E R S F O C U S I N G E D U C A T I O N O N T H E F U T U R E. Preparing for Career Success in Hospitality and Tourism CC9009

The EstorilCoast extends from the Atlantic Ocean and the Tagus river estuary in the south and west up to the northern boundary of the parish of

1st semester Common Core subjects taught to all classes

THE COLLEGE OF THE BAHAMAS CULINARY & HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT INSTITUTE

Master in Management. Marianne Snakers

Pr. Hervé REMIGNON, PhD.

An Irish Case Study: Molecular Gastronomy Developments at the Dublin Institute of Technology

Basics in oenology, viticulture and wine tasting (EM1S5M12)

A kickstart towards lifelong learning

C a r e e r C l u s t e r s F o c u s i n g education on the future. Preparing for Career Success in Hospitality and Tourism CC9009

Biomedical Sciences and Health Technologies Social and Legal Science and Humanities Experimental and Technical Science

Leicester Goes Global

Art and Cooking Italian culinary school, Italian cuisine Italian culinary courses.

ESH Paris London. ESH Paris Hotelschool International Hospitality and Tourism Management Programs

Traineeships & Company Assignments. Food Technology

STUDY AT ONE OF THE WORLD S BEST UNIVERSITIES

Faculty of Economics and Business University of Zagreb POSTGRADUATE (DOCTORAL) PROGRAMMES IN BUSINESS STUDIES AND ECONOMICS

Study in Brussels. The heart of Europe

International Culinary Arts Programmes. all courses validated by. Luzern, Switzerland

A. Master of Science Programme (120 credits) in Social Studies of Gender (Masterprogram i genusstudier)

Country note China. More than 255 million people in OECD and G20 countries have now attained tertiary education (Table A1.3a).

2015 INTERNATIONAL FEES

VI TRAINING PROGRAM IN SPANISH GASTRONOMY 10th June 7th November 2013

TOURISM & HOSPITALITY MANAGEMENT PROGRAMMES 2014

GENERAL AND SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS FOR TEACHERS OF RECOGNISED SUBJECTS IN MAINSTREAM POST- PRIMARY EDUCATION

DUCASSEDUCATION. Chef de Partie Program for culinary school graduates culinary professionals with 2-3 years of experience

Programme Specification

Interior Architecture

The Agricultural and AgriFood Sector in Canada

Curriculum Multimedia Designer

JAMK University of Applied Sciences. School of Business

School of taste and culture. School of talents discoverers

982 Introduction to Beverages and Tasting. By Dr. Wen-Tsung Chen & Dr. Hsiao-I Hou

Foods With Healthy Supplements and Organics Have Room for Growth

SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES BACHELOR S DEGREE IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

Professional Diploma in Culinary and Hospitality Management

The MBA Luxury Brand Marketing

Transcription:

COURSES At the University of Gastronomic Sciences The University of Gastronomic Sciences, born and promoted in 2004 by the Slow Food association in collaboration with the Piedmont and Emilia-Romagna regional authorities, is a private university legally recognized by the Italian state. The University offers the following courses: A three-year undergraduate degree in Gastronomic Sciences A two-year graduate degree in Management and Promotion of the Gastronomic and Tourist Heritage Three post-graduate Masters in Food Culture and Communications: - Representation, Place, and Identity - Human Ecology and Sustainability - High-Quality Products A post-graduate Master in Italian Wine Culture (from 2015) High Apprenticeship vocational training courses for *: - bakers and pizza chefs - master brewers * to be activated in 2016 Two Master courses in The Slow Art of Italian Cuisine in English and in Italian at the Pollenzo Cookery School

Three-year Undergraduate Degree in Gastronomic Sciences The three-year undergraduate degree in Gastronomic Sciences trains the gastronome, a new professional with a holistic vision of the food world, to work in the fields of quality agricultural and food production, distribution, promotion and communication. Graduates in Gastronomic Sciences are qualified to work in food and wine communication and in protection consortia, food companies and tourist bodies and on the marketing and promotion of premium products, in the sourcing and selection of food products, in food training and education and, finally, to set up micro-enterprises and artisan, retail and catering businesses. The course combines the humanities and science with sensory training, direct experience (through study trips) of industrial and artisan processes to provide students with a set of skills and a multifaceted approach to the complexity of the world of gastronomy. Syllabus Year I Food Biodiversity Sciences Elements of Statistics, Economics and Methodology Molecular Sciences Elements of European Law Food Microbiology History of Agriculture and Food Computer skills Italian for foreigners English Gastronomy Workshop 1 st Year 2 optional courses Year II Agrifood Systems Food Technologies I Elements of molecular science, physiology of taste and nutraceuticals History of Cuisine and Wine Geography and Tourism Gastronomy Workshop 2 nd year 2 optional courses Year III Economics and Agricultural and Food Law Gastronomic Ecodesign Catering Systems and Technologies General and Territorial Sociology Nutrition and Dietetics Cultural Anthropology Philosophy and Semiotics of Food Gastronomy Workshop 3 rd year 2 optional courses Study trips The University organizes more than 100 study trips in Italy and round the world. During the three-year undergraduate degree course, students make 15 such trips (five a year). Some of the trips are themed, dedicated to specific agrifood sectors, such as:

- Coffee, non-conventional agriculture, beverages, fishing, oil. Others are regional and explore the distinctive gastronomic and cultural features of specific local areas, such as: - the Italian regions; - Europe: France, Spain, Czech Republic, Greece, Croatia, Denmark, UK. - Rest of the world: Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda, India, Japan, Canada, United States, Argentina, Mexico, Peru. These in-the-field experiences allow future gastronomes to learn by using their five senses, follow the production chain and discover biodiversity by tasting food, meeting the people who grow, produce and process it and attending lessons held by experts and producers. During trips students also perform video-documentation work, interviewing farmers, fishers and artisans, all repositories of traditional knowledge. The resulting material will supplement The Granaries of Memory, a University of Gastronomic Sciences project for a databank of traditional knowledge from all over the world.

Two-year graduate Degree Course in Promotion and Management of the Gastronomic and Tourist Heritage The degree course is designed to train entrepreneurs in the agrifood sector, placing special emphasis on economics and business. The various subject areas covered in the syllabus comprise both the empiric sciences (especially on the food technology courses) and the human sciences (with courses on economics, law, anthropology, philosophy, communication and geography). The degree course, which reflects the innovative outlook typical of Pollenzo, is expressly designed to train students to set up business on their own or work in existing businesses; for this reason special emphasis is placed on subjects designed to develop entrepreneurism. Graduates from other universities will be offered an entrance refresher course to bring their qualifications into line with those of graduates in Gastronomic Sciences at the UNISG. For UNISG graduates, the first three months of the course will be devoted to an internship at one of the UNISG Partners companies in Italy or abroad. The program is taught in Italian only. Syllabus Year I Food business economics and management Food law and production Valutation and systemic planning of the gastronomic supply Consumer sociology Geography and ecology of the terroir History and tradition of the gastronomic heritage Training/entrance refresher course Training I (Field projects) Year II Aesthetics and languages of contemporary gastronomy Food technologies for innovation English for food business At least two subjects from: Food marketing and social media Trademark and competition law Ethics of the environment and new food challenges Biocultural heritages and new food challenges Agroecosystem sustainability assessment Cartography Training II (Internship) Thesis One of the strong points of the course is a series of field projects, performed by small groups of students coordinated by a lecturer on real issues and problems proposed by companies. They are supplemented study trips organized to find out more about significant business cases. Meetings are also organized with representatives of the most important Italian and foreign food and wine companies, who will bring their personal knowledge and experience to Pollenzo and interact with students on the most topical issues.

At the end of the second year, a 3-4 month internship at one of the UNISG Contributing Members or Strategic Partners companies brings the course to an end. Attendance is compulsory and lectures are in Italian.

The three Masters in Food Culture and Communications > Human Ecology and Sustainability > Representation, Place, and Identity > High-Quality Products Each Master in Food Culture and Communications deals with a distinct gastronomy-related subject. Part of the syllabus is common to all four courses and is designed to supplement the specific subjects and aimed at students interested in an innovative approach to the study and representation of food. Through a mixture of lectures, exercises, guided tastings, projects and study trips in Italy and abroad, the program gives students multidisciplinary knowledge not only of high-quality artisan and industrial food products, but also of the skills required to communicate the history, ecology, technology and the social and cultural significance of food. A method combining anthropology, history, ecology, food policy and tastings with communication gives students the tools to develop new promotional and educational strategies. The Master trains a new type of professional capable of working in the fields of community project management, training, marketing and communication. At the end of the course, each student must complete a 6-8 week internship in a company or organization in Italy or overseas or on a UNISG research project. Internships are centered round sustainable food production or communication and provide the bases for the students theses, which they then present to an academic committee. All lectures are in English. The program lasts for 14 months and attendance is compulsory. Master in Food Culture and Communications: Human Ecology and Sustainability This course addresses the importance of social, economic and environmental sustainability in food production and consumer networks, and, above all, of traditional knowledge for understanding of the small-scale sustainable production of high-quality local products, bio-cultural diversity and the food heritage. The human ecology part of the course focuses on the environment, ethnobiology and ecology. The course will also make in-depth analysis of how knowledge, beliefs and practices related to the natural environment and cooking are incorporated in the social system and how this inextricable network is crucial for sustainable, communitarian local resource management and for the promotion of good practices in the production and consumption of organic local food. The course also analyzes the role of women in the local food system, the dynamic nature of local ecological knowledge, ethnobotany, agroecology, organic agriculture, migrants food systems and the significance of all this for contemporary health and nutrition policies. Master in Food Culture and Communications: Representation, Place, and Identity The Master's program in "Food Culture and Communications: Representation, Place, and Identity" is a unique introduction to food studies that educates the best food communicators and cultural mediators of the future to work and operate in a global scenario. The program includes three parts: coursework, study trips, and internships. The courses in the program have two major concentrations: "food history, anthropology, and sociology," which explores the relationships between food and multiple identities and places (body, home, community, city, region, nation, and global); and "communication and media," which explores the theories of meaning and representation and offers practical classes in food writing, photography, documentary film, and video. Furthermore, tasting classes introduce students to the deep understanding of quality wine, olive oil, cured meats, chocolate, balsamic vinegar, and cheese. Classes are taught by top international scholars. A unique study trip program brings students to experience hands on the world of food production and marketing, with an emphasis on independent, organic, and

sustainable farming and fishing. An amazing variety of exciting internships in every part of the world are available to all students. The diversity of our students, coming from the five continents and very different cultural background, incredibly enrich the experience and creates networks of friendship that last for a lifetime. Master in Food Culture and Communications: High-Quality Products This course makes in-depth exploration of both gastronomic and select artisan food products in a continuous comparison with agro-industrially-produced food to verify characteristics and differences. The food products studied during the course include beverages such as wine, beer and spirits, and foods such as cheese, meat, pasta, rice, extra virgin olive oil, vinegar, salt, spices, chocolate, coffee and tea. High-quality products often have an intangible value, are bought for what they represent and act as status symbols. Many if not all of them are closely connected to a specific region with which they are often identified. Part of the aim of this course is to understand the product s regional appeal and understand what constitutes the link between the product and the region itself. This approach demands a change in perspective, setting out not from the region but rather from the taste of the product which may be analyzed, understood and describe then looking back to understand the factors that have created that taste: ie, the production methods, primary ingredients, place and history that lead to the finished product. Master in Italian Wine Culture This new Master course will begin in 2015. Its aim will be to train international Italian wine experts. Special emphasis will be placed on Italian history, art and culture, as well as the narrative capacities of the Italian winemaking heritage. The course will consist of 500 hours of lectures in Pollenzo, 3 weeks of study trips to Italy s various wine areas, visits to wine cellars in Piedmont, tasting courses, talks, meetings with winemakers and a final internship in a winery. The syllabus will include the following subjects: -Viticulture and Ampelography - Enology - Botany and Entomology - Elements of Geology - Geography of the terroir - Sensory Analysis - Aesthetics of Wine - History of Wine - History of Italy and History of Italian Art - Principles of Holistic Gastronomy - Wine Management - Consumer Sociology - Wine Communication and Wine Writing The special feature of the course is that it will take students into vineyards and wine cellars to follow the seasonal cycle of the vine, from pruning to polling and thinning, from spraying to harvesting and vinification.

High Apprenticeship vocational training courses (Alto Apprendistato) for bakers and pizza chefs - master brewers * to be activated in 2016 The High Apprenticeship vocational training courses teach the trades most in demand in the food sector: bakers, pizza chefs, master brewers Classroom and workshop are the two harmoniously integrated souls of the training course, in which the humanistic and technological knowledge taught on the gastronomic sciences courses in Pollenzo interweave with the artisan know-how of the Slow Food network in all its excellence. The courses offer concrete job opportunities to young school-leavers and graduates, as well as to people who are already employed but wish to learn a new profession. The High Apprenticeship program grants a first-level Master s diploma with 60 CFUs (university training credits) to graduates and an attendance certificate to students with secondary school diplomas. Courses, which are taught in Italian, last 15 months and attendance is compulsory. They comprise: 5 months of lectures to explore the processing and characteristics of primary ingredients, food business economics and legislation, the art of tasting, gastronomic culture and anthropology, including exams and 8 months of apprenticeship in craft workshops selected by Slow Food and the University of Gastronomic Sciences. One final month and a half will be dedicated to discussion of the craft workshop experience, the expression of the art and manual skills acquired in the preparation of the food product in question and the production of a written or audiovisual creative, interpretative document about the profession in question. High-Quality Popular Italian Cooking Courses (Master in the Slow Art of Italian Cuisine) Two courses, each a year long, the first in Italian, the second in English (Master in the Slow Art of Italian Cuisine). Each course will be open to a maximum of 20 students. The aim of the course is not to train chefs in the traditional sense of the term, but to guide those keen to enter or entering the profession. Special emphasis will be placed on primary ingredients and highquality food products, and how to use them. This original, innovative teaching model is based on cookery seen as passion, sharing and pleasure: The course will alternate lectures and lessons in Pollenzo with practical training experience in Osterias and Restaurants. Study trips, a prerogative of all the University s courses, are also a feature of the advanced course in quality Italian cookery. The course will focus not so much on the acquisition of cooking techniques as on knowledge of food products. The course will include a number of talks about food products and practical lessons by experts, among whom visiting professors, producers, professional tasters, chefs and cooks who have collaborated with the University and Slow Food for years.

UNISG facts and figures: - 1 three-year undergraduate degree course - 1 graduate degree course - 3master courses in Food Culture and Communications - 1 Master in Italian Wine Culture - 5 High Apprenticeship courses - 2 Master in the Slow Art of Italian Cuisine (Italian and English) - 1,590 students from all over the word have attended our courses since 2004-744 foreign students - 399 graduates in Gastronomic Sciences - 85 graduates in the Promotion and Management of the Gastronomic and Tourist Heritage - 495 students who have received the diploma Master in Food Culture and Communications diploma - 165 students (21% of those enrolled on degree courses) have received scholarships - over 800 study trips in Italy and worldwide - 70 nationalities represented to date Plus: - 170 Companies and Institutions have supported the Association of Friends of the University over the years - 30 Companies are members of the Strategic Partners Club.