🌾 Feeding the World: Food Systems, Global Hunger, and the Politics of the Plate
In this C1-level reading lesson, students will explore the global food system through five thematic chapters spanning ten pages. Beginning with the Green Revolution and the industrialisation of agriculture, the text moves through the paradox of simultaneous obesity and famine, the staggering scale of food waste, the geopolitics of food security, and the emerging alternatives — from regenerative agriculture to lab-grown meat — that promise to reshape how humanity feeds itself. Students will encounter advanced vocabulary related to agriculture, economics, nutrition, environmental science, and international development, and engage with interactive vocabulary exercises, matching activities, and a comprehensive comprehension quiz.
Lesson Plan
- Chapter I: The Green Revolution — industrialisation of agriculture, hybrid seeds, fertilisers, irrigation, and unintended consequences
- Chapter II: The Hunger Paradox — obesity vs. malnutrition, food deserts, structural poverty, and the politics of access
- Chapter III: The Scandal of Waste — post-harvest losses, retail cosmetic standards, consumer behaviour, and the environmental cost
- Chapter IV: Geopolitics of the Plate — food as a weapon, trade dependency, commodity speculation, climate shocks, and food sovereignty
- Chapter V: Reimagining the Food System — regenerative agriculture, vertical farming, lab-grown meat, indigenous knowledge, and the circular food economy
- Highlighted vocabulary with hover definitions throughout all ten pages
Key Vocabulary
Grammar Points
- Complex noun phrases: The large-scale adoption of high-yield hybrid seed varieties transformed agricultural output across the developing world.
- Inversion after negative adverbials: Not until the early 21st century did the true environmental cost of industrial agriculture become widely acknowledged.
- Advanced passive with modal perfects: Much of the food wasted in developed nations could have been redistributed to those in need.
- Concessive clauses with 'notwithstanding': Notwithstanding the Green Revolution's undeniable achievements, its long-term ecological consequences have been severe.
- Cleft sentences: It is not the total quantity of food produced but its distribution that determines whether people go hungry.
Unisciti alle Nostre Lezioni!
Crediamo che le domande giuste portino le risposte giuste. Se hai domande sul tuo percorso di apprendimento, siamo sempre qui per te.