NK
Feb 24, 2019
It was very informative course. It could have more quizzes and assignments. The way things were explained in the course was quiet interesting. Keep it up!! course. I really like this way of education.
GG
Oct 7, 2021
this course changed my view on healthy eating and also instilled healthy cooking habits in me! I absolutely oved the simple , delicious and healthy recipes! definitely trying them out ! Thank you Maya
By MAMONAHI
•Apr 6, 2018
The food part I think is unnecessary
By Anna
•Jun 29, 2020
Very basic well known knowledge...
By Louise R
•Apr 29, 2020
It didn't teach me anything new
By Zyia N
•Oct 19, 2024
Where is my Certificate ???
By Barbara S C
•May 6, 2024
It was any minimal course.
By susvithar
•Dec 26, 2023
only interview based course
By Elena
•Aug 4, 2019
Created by Captain Obvious
By Yusuf M A
•Apr 21, 2021
Should have been longer.
By deepak k
•May 6, 2020
Gaining few of knowledge
By K
•Jul 29, 2023
Very basic knowledge
By Bulat K
•Apr 2, 2023
Not very deep course
By José V d C
•Oct 23, 2016
Very basic knowledge
By Leyton S
•Jan 22, 2016
Not in depth enough
By Elena K A
•Feb 19, 2016
Not much content
By Hamd A
•Aug 21, 2021
very basic
By Maria L
•Dec 16, 2017
very basic
By Tod B
•Oct 6, 2020
av .
By khalid a
•May 5, 2024
bon
By Gabriele Z
•Sep 21, 2023
This is the worst course I have ever taken on coursera. I expected a course based on scientific facts and unbiased, not the anti-meat propaganda, that I had to get through. Additionally, the level of this course is really low (grammar school, kindergarten ..)? There is not a single reference to scientific studies when presenting facts! A lot of these so called facts are wrong. Carbohydrates are essentiell? Since when? Fat profile of a steak shows only saturated fats, really? Fiber is essentiell (Have the authors told this to the Inuit, Massai or other tribes, who like our ancestors during the ice ages ate almost exclusivily animal products?). Eggs and fish obviously contain a complete profile of proteins according to the course material but meat??? Not mentioned. Did the authors say anything about bio-availibilty of certain nutrients (especially in the case of plants? Nope. And then the typical nonsense about calories in and calories out (humans are not a calorimeter bomb nor a closed up thermodynamical system!), everything is allowed in moderation, eat a variety of plant based foods ... Aren't these not the exact same concepts that are at the root of the obesity epidemic? Coca Cola formulates it a little bit more fancier: Move more, eat less! So why should it work this time? Are there real people testimonials that show, that by changing their diet the way this course suggests, had worked for them both in the short term and also the long term (greater than 5 years!). And here I am not talking about metabolically healthy younger people but people over 50 with metabolical issues. What animal eats in moderation and a huge variety of different foods? Well only humans ... What animal has an epidemic of obesity, type 2 diabetes, cancer ... Well, humans and their pets. Maybe a paradigm shift would be helpfull? And then there are those healthy recipes. First a crepe recipe with added sugar! Was'nt added sugar according to the course a problem? And why at all add sugar to a crepe batter? The message of this course is to reduce highly processed foods (which will surely help) with the major part of the consumed food to consist of vegetables and fruit. The sugar content of said fruit obviously doesn't count (because the WHO said so) but added sugars are bad! Really? Because the sugars in fruits like mangos or bananas don't magically rise blood sugars. Where are the references to studies that show this? If this is the quality of courses coming from Standford, then I won't take any more in the future!
By Cherry W
•Sep 24, 2022
week 2-4 shares a lot of empty knowledge, shares basic idea about health, but it is so general and basic to a point I would consider as a secondary school syllabus, not a university course. Week 1 is fine, but again, it is already covered in secondary school syllabus (referring to GCSE / IB syllabus). Also, informational like these can easily be gathered through some health magazines.
Please reconsider the educational targets, and increase actual, scientific knowledge / theories related. I will not recommend this course except for the certificate purpose.
By Steven M
•Mar 28, 2022
So much outdated nutritional information! This course tarnishes the Stanford brand. Do yourself a favor, skip this course and read a book by an actual nutritional expert. Google: The China Study by T. Colin Campbell, The Starch Solution, Dr. Neal Barnard PCRM, Fiber Fueled, and so many more who had been preaching the answer since at least the 80's.
The answer is simple, eat a diet of diverse plants. I was hoping this course would delve deeper and present it in a way that made it accesible to a wide audience.
Very disappointed.
By Leah C
•Feb 24, 2021
I really am shocked to see that an institution of higher learning is teaching a course about health that talks about the BMI (Body Mass Index) number in its lessons. If you've studied health and nutrition you would know that a calculation that only takes in two factors (your height and your weight) is not an accurate or conclusive way to measure someone's health. It also plays a huge part in perpetuating fat phobia in the medical field. I am highly disappointed in this course and how outdated its definition of health is.
By Savich I
•Oct 9, 2020
Waste of time. Didn't expect this from any university.
Basic nutritionology course looks like an advertisement for a cook book from the lecturer of this course with recipes that I would not cook for myself, not only for children (fried, flour, sweet, food of animal origin). As if this lecturer still lives in the last century and is trying to teach us to eat rightI. I can find more advanced nutritional information in youtube or instagram. Only many making, no science and health care. Wouldn't recommend!
By Alexandre R
•Apr 4, 2024
Very weak course. Little useful information and remains on the fence when it comes to condemning ultra-processed carbohydrates as promoters of non-communicable coronary diseases, such as diabetes. It clearly avoids confronting the interests of the food pyramid defended by the food industry by claiming that "the reasons for the epidemic of obesity, diabetes, etc., in recent decades are not known", even though there are thousands of studies proving the causes.
By Michaela H
•May 10, 2018
Very basic information, great if this is your first time learning about food and health, but if you've ever read a Michael Pollin book on the subject of food, no new information. Not the sort of college class I would have expected from Stanford. The cooking videos with the gal and her kids are actually adorable, and had some cool gluten free recipes associated with them. Not sure it was worth slogging through the rest of the class for, so skip to the end.