198x Filetype PPTX File size 0.25 MB Source: dese.ade.arkansas.gov
Introduction Child Nutrition Professionals - whether a director, manager, or kitchen staff - work to prepare tasty, nutritious, and safe meals for their students. To ensure the best quality meals are served in schools, kitchens must effectively manage time and simplify their work. The following manual teaches the principles of time management and work simplification as they relate to school food service and the United States Department of Agriculture Child Nutrition Programs. After participating in the Kitchen Management Course, participants will be able to: • Describe the importance of work and personal organization • Explain cost savings in a well managed kitchen • Design work, cleaning, and equipment schedules • Demonstrate techniques for simplifying work In the sections and activities ahead, new Child Nutrition Professionals will have the opportunity to evaluate their current kitchen management practices and to develop an action plan for improving the time management and work simplification skills of their school kitchen. Work Organization The first step in managing a successful school kitchen is to organize the work. Work organization helps to achieve work with the greatest efficiency, maximum economy with minimum effort, and secure the personal development of those working in the organization. Advantages to Work Organization: • Labor is more efficiently used; • Equipment is used efficiently; • Labor hours are more productive; • Responsibilities and the workload are more evenly divided; • Employees have a better understanding of their duties; • The operation is run more efficiently; • The employee develops a sense of security and pride; • There is less change of a job begin left incomplete; and, • There is less pressure and strain. What other advantages can you think of? Project 1 Look at this example of how work organization can improve outcomes even in a home kitchen. In the space below, roughly sketch the kitchen in your home. Identify where you currently store the ingredients and equipment needed to make coffee and draw the path you follow while making coffee. (Consider using a red pen to draw the path) Project 1 Now consider how you could better organize the work that must be done in your home kitchen to make coffee. Draw another rough sketch of your kitchen at home. How could you decrease the amount of space between your cups and your coffee pot? Are you running back and forth between the counter and the refrigerator to get creamer? Where is the sugar in relation to where you place your coffee cup on the counter? How can you make coffee more efficiently in your kitchen with small changes? Cost Savings The second step in successful school kitchen management is to consider cost savings. Cost savings is the reduction of business expenses and is important to Child Nutrition Programs because meals are reimbursed at a specified amount. That amount must cover food, labor, and indirect costs. Child Nutrition Professionals must look at current policies and procedures that potentially increase costs and consider ways they can improve cost savings. With increasing food costs, labor costs, and other expenses, the Child Nutrition dollar is being stretched further than ever. Food cost is not the only criteria that schools must look at to find a source of saving money. One place school kitchens can look for cost savings is in their management of time. After all, TIME IS MONEY. Saving Money by Time Management The exercise on the next page will help you to see how labor dollars can be lost in a variety of ways. Often the person wasting them is not even aware that it is happening.
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.