Untitled 1 ANTH203 FOOD ACROSS CULTURES Assessment Task: Eating Experience Research Weighting: 30% (in total) Due dates: • In-class presentations in Weeks 8 and 9. These group presentations are worth...

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Untitled 1 ANTH203 FOOD ACROSS CULTURES Assessment Task: Eating Experience Research Weighting: 30% (in total) Due dates: • In-class presentations in Weeks 8 and 9. These group presentations are worth 10 per cent of your overall mark in this unit. All group members will receive the same mark for the presentation. 
 • A report of 1,000 words is due on Friday May 10 at 11:59pm. Submit this 
report via the Turnitin link in your iLearn site.
 • Your individual report is worth 20 per cent of your overall mark in this unit. Reports are marked individually, according to the marking rubric available through Turnitin and on iLearn. 
 • Late Submission Penalty: unless a Special Consideration request has been submitted and approved, (a) a penalty for lateness will apply – two (2) marks out of 100 will be deducted per day for assignments submitted after the due date – and (b) no assignment will be accepted more than seven (7) days (incl. weekends) after the original submission deadline. Description: 
 For this assignment you will work in groups of three. You will choose a particular eating experience, whether it is dinner at home with a family, a holiday or religious festival meal event, eating at the local cafeteria, a backyard BBQ, or dining in a cafe or restaurant. You will then produce an ethnographic account and analysis of this eating experience. The lectures, readings and class discussions in this course should direct you to consider issues such as: the physical layout of the chosen space; the social dynamics of the place: who sits where, who serves whom, and what and how they eat; the symbolic meaning of food; the role of gender, identity and/or class in this eating experience. 
The task is to closely observe an eating experience, and to provide some analysis of your observations based on the course material. 
Presentation (10 per cent of overall grade in this subject) 
You have 8-10 minutes to share your research project and findings with your classmates. You need to be concise and well organized. Hint: rehearse your presentation ahead of time so you don’t get cut off halfway through.
Creativity in style and media of presentation is encouraged for the in-class presentations! We strongly encourage you to make use of some kind of visual aide in your presentation. Your presentation will be marked on the basis of the following criteria: 
 2 1. Clarity of presentation: how clearly do you communicate to your classmates what it is you have been looking at, and what it is you have found out? 
 2. Creativity in presentation style: did you find interesting, innovative ways to communicate your ideas, and to engage your classmates’ interest? 
 3. Depth of analysis: you need to succinctly explain the analysis and interpretation of your data. 
 Written report (20 per cent of your overall grade in this subject) Although this is a group project your written report must be your own work. Submit an individual report: there will be different interpretations of the same project. Your report should use subheadings. Please follow the guide below when setting out your report: • Project Title • Project description and findings (be specific): First, explain clearly what you set out to do and how you went about it. Provide details of location, participants, times etc. In this section you are explaining the research method you used. Then, summarise your observations in a clear and concise way. Include ‘ethnographic description’ of your research site. What did you observe? Provide details of the setting, the social relationships and the cultural practices you observed. Did your observations meet your expectations? You may like to include maps, diagrams, sketches and photographs in this section. • Analysis: Discuss your findings and try and theorise them in some way. What key theme or themes emerged. Draw on material, ideas and theories we have covered in this course to identify those themes. You should cite at least one academic reference in this section. • Reference list (not included in word count). Throughout the report you should use in- text referencing. Your report will be marked according to the marking rubric available in iLearn. Please take the time to consult the rubric. Suggested topics The eating experience you choose to describe and analyse is up to you, but below are a few ideas. You can choose from one of these ideas, or you can come up with your own topic. • Think about the physical and social structure of an everyday meal at home with your family 
 3 • Present a typical Christmas (or other holiday) meal in a group member’s family. Who comes to dinner? Who prepares the food? Who sits where? How are the places set at the table? Where is the food arranged and how does that correspond with who sits at the table? (For example: one food sociologist did a fantastic analysis of how placement of the salt shaker at a table signalled social hierarchies within the family: who has to ask for the salt to be passed to them, and who passes the salt, shows who controls the meal.) You may want to interview family members to gain insight into the meaning of the meal. 
 • Analyse the social space of a restaurant. Who drinks? Who eats? When? How much? How do people move through the physical space of the restaurant? How do patrons of the restaurant interact in the space with their friends, with restaurant employees, etc?
 • Analyse a barbeque, a picnic that you attended, the experience of eating at a public sporting event or festival, eating at local markets etc... Human Ethics Approval: As this is a study involving human subjects, however innocuous it may seem, it is important to follow the university’s approved procedures for human research ethics. Here is a summary of what you need to do, but we will discuss this in greater detail in class. 1) Consent of research participants: If you are interviewing people to understand their perceptions of that eating experience, you need to obtain the consent of participants. This means everyone you talk to, including family members! No covert research: we are not investigative journalists! Download the relevant ‘Information and Consent form’ 2) Obtaining separate consent for photographing and recording the interviews: If you want to take photographs of the event or use existing photographs from, say, a family holiday meal from years past, then you’ll need to get permission for that, too. Sample consent forms will be made available for you to use, and you will tailor the form according to the parameters of your chosen research project (i.e. based on whether you want to just interview people or also take pictures), and then you will add your name and contact information to the form. 3) Observing in public: If you are observing public behaviour in public spaces (including the public spaces on the Macquarie University campus, but this could also include a public park, botanic gardens, etc.) but not actually talking to people, then you do not need to ask each person for permission to observe him or her, but it is essential that you observe in a non- obtrusive way and use no recording devices. In other words, no filming or photographing in a way that would make an individual recognizable. Also, you should try to blend into the background. Don’t go around peering over people’s shoulders to see what they’re eating, or otherwise violating the norms of regular social behaviour in that public space. 4 4) Photographing without consent: The one exception to the rule about obtaining individual consent for photographing is if you are using a wide-angle lens to photograph the general context of an eating space. IF the focus of the picture is the space as a whole and IF you don’t think that individuals in the scene will be identifiable, then you probably do not need to get their consent. But you should take photographs with tact and under no circumstances should you position yourselves, when photographing, within 3 metres of any individual within the picture frame. Even with these precautions in place, keep in mind that some people might be sensitive to the possibility of being photographed. If anyone does come up and ask, “What are you doing?” while taking a picture, you should respond: “I’m taking a wide-angle picture of the campus eating space as part of a project for my anthropology class, Food Across Cultures. Would you like to see the picture I’m taking?” You should then offer to let the individual review the digital photos that you have already taken. If the individual feels that s/he is recognizable in the picture and objects, then you should delete the photo in front of the individual and proceed to take your pictures without that person in the picture frame. 5) Research in a privately-owned space: If you decide to do your observational study in a restaurant off of the Macquarie campus, you will need to obtain permission from the owner or manager of that restaurant. There is a specific information and consent form designed for this, which you will personalize with your own details and contact info. Under no circumstances should you conduct research in a privately owned venue without obtaining the consent of the manager or owner. You will have to submit the signed consent form the unit convenor, Eve Vincent, before you can begin your research. In other words, you’ll need to make at least two trips to the restaurant: one to get the owner’s consent, and another to actually conduct your research project once that consent has been obtained. Download the relevant ‘Information and Consent form’. Possible exception: if you are describing a special family meal in the restaurant and all you are describing are the family dynamics of sitting at that table and eating, and you are NOT describing the restaurant more generally or interviewing the restaurant employees or patrons, then you do not need to obtain the consent of the restaurant. Task: · Assess the physical layout of the chosen space: Bhavish · The social dynamics of
Answered Same DayApr 17, 2021ANTH203

Answer To: Untitled 1 ANTH203 FOOD ACROSS CULTURES Assessment Task: Eating Experience Research Weighting: 30%...

Soumi answered on Apr 24 2021
142 Votes
PHYSICAL LAYOUT OF BONDI PIZZA IN TOP RYDE CITY
(PRESENTATION)
Physical layout of Bondi pizza
Bon
di pizza is a restaurant and bar, serves at various location. The location of the restaurants is Brighton Le Sands, Bondi Junction, Parramatta, Eastgardens, Top Ryde City in Macquarie, Broadway. I had visited the joint at Top Ryde city. The restaurant has ambient environment. People of all ethnic group come to them are join to enjoy the soothing location and vibrant crowd while eating thin pressed pizza. Chef of restaurant made the pizza using fresh quality products bought from local Australian growers and...
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