<p>Foreword; Stephanie Valentine.- Introduction; Marion Rutland and Angela Turner.- Part I: Food Teaching in Primary and Secondary Schools in Different Cultures.- Exploring Food Education in the English Primary Curriculum; Sue Miles-Pearson.- Reducing Challenging Behaviour and Maintaining Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (ATSI) and non ATSI Student Retention through Food and Exercise in Primary and Secondary Schools in New South Wales, Australia; Gillian Stuart and Angela Turner.- What is the Current State of Play for Food Education in English Secondary Schools? Ruth Seabrook and Vanessa Grafham.- A Technological Approach to Secondary Food Education in New Zealand; Wendy Slatter.- Developments in Secondary Food Education in England since the 1970s: A Personal Perspective; Angela J. Turner.- Food and Nutrition Education in Malta: a Journey across time and Subject Boundaries; Suzanne Piscopo.- Home Economics Education in the Secondary School Settings: Lessons from Education Policy on the Island of Ireland; Amanda McCloat and Martin Caraher.- Part II: The Professional Identity of Food Teachers.- Positive Ingredients to Redefine Food Education in Schools in New South Wales, Australia; Donna Owen.- Where will Future Secondary Food Teachers come from in England? Sue Wood-Pearson and Suzanne Lawson.- Changing the Professional Identity of Food Technology Teachers in New South Wales, Australia; Deborah Trevallion.- Qualifications for Working in the Food Industry: Understanding all the Available Options for Students and Educators in Victoria, Australia; Bronwyn Graham.- Continuing Professional Development for Secondary Food Technology teachers in New South Wales (NSW), Australia; Carly Hart.- Food Teaching in Upper Secondary English Schools: Progression into Food Related Undergraduate Courses in Higher Education; Marion Rutland.- Part III: Current Content and Contemporary Issues.- Current Research in Nutrition in the School Curriculum in England; Sue Reeves.- A Curriculum Developer’s Perspective on the Place of Food in the Secondary School in England; David Barlex.- Population Growth and Global Food Supplies; Christopher Ritson.- Socially Acute Questions: How Biotechnology can Provide Context and Content for Discussion in Food Technology Education; Bev France.- Teaching Food Technology in a Secondary Technology Education Classroom: Exploring Ideas in Indigenous Contexts; Mishack Gumbo.- Learning Cultural, Ecological and Food Literacies though the Gumbaynggirr Pathway of Knowledge Project; Angela Turner.- A Synoptic View of Sections 1, 2 and 3; Marion Rutland and Angela Turner.</p>