Jae Gruber-Price

Jae Gruber-PriceCHEP

About me

Jae Gruber-Price instructed more than a dozen classes in culinary technique and hospitality education. She served as a member of the Academic Leadership Team for Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts in Atlanta for 13 years and completed her service to the organization as Interim Director of Education. Her responsibilities included: conducting bi-annual employee evaluations; faculty observations; classroom, syllabus, rubrics and student customer service quality control; curriculum development and enforcement of syllabus standards; student worker management; payroll responsibilities; coordinator of faculty development activities; talent acquisition; retention initiatives; records management; accreditation preparation; regulatory compliance; scheduling for an average of forty instructors during four shift periods for over 70 classes.

Additional experience includes the role of Executive Chef for several fine dining restaurants, as well as an extensive background in high-end exclusive catering, kosher catering, a personal chef, and the opportunity to cook at the James Beard House. She worked as a restaurant consultant in Atlanta and Central America, specializing in menu and wine list development, training, and sanitation improvement.  Jae is currently the owner of Life Cuisine, a Personal Chef and private home culinary and wine instruction service.  She is also a professor at Underwood University, for the Bachelor of Hotel Management degree program.

Jae was the recipient of the 2016 Distinguished Educator of the Year award for Academic Leadership from Career Education Corporation. She has earned several professional certifications, such as CCE, FMP, and CHEP. Jae is a Culinary, Hospitality, and Events Specialist evaluator for ACICS and ACCSET.

Jae was previously the host for the Le Cordon Bleu Radio Show and later, her own culinary talk radio show. She contributed articles to Le Cordon Bleu publications, has had recipes published in Dine Out Atlanta and Lisa Boalt Richardson’s Book, The World in your Tea Cup, and she has also had a stint as an online syndicated food columnist.  She is also the author of the online MaxKnowledge course:  Introduction to Culinary Instruction.

Activity

Daniel, Sharing your past and present industry experiences can really help students related to the informaton being conveyed and why it is important to learn, understand and apply the concepts. Jae Gruber
Emma, This is a good approach. Helping students understand why particular policies are to their advantage is preferable rather than just enforcing a rule for the sake of the rule itself. Jae Gruber
Peter, These are great ideas. Many students do not know Chefs beyond what they see on the popular food networks. Information on "not so famous" Chefs who are still very successful cab often give students are more realistic understaning of the world they are entering. Jae Gruber
Stacy, I like your idea of prioritzing the items as a class. Sometimes students are not yet aware of what will take the longest or shortest amount of time and may initially be unrealistic in their timeline if not guided during the process. Jae Gruber
Brenda, I completely agree. Instructors need to set the example for students that education, professional development and continuous improvement never ends. Jae Gruber
Joseph, These are all excellent ways to keep the student involved and active in the class. Jae Gruber
Robert, I agree that multitasking is important as well as a sense of urgency. If these concepts are not consistently reinforced, some students may make the prodcution of one items stretch to fill the entire class period or may be overly reliant on others to assist them in completing their production. Jae Gruber
Michael , It is good to see that so many people are using time lines or battle plans in their production classes. I agree, while it can create a sense of urgency which is excellent, it can sometimes be a detriment as students may take short cuts to meet their timeline. Either outcome can provide a "learning moment". Jae Gruber
Pierre, These are all excellent ideas to keep instructors on the cutting edge and to share with students. Jae Gruber
Ryan, I agree, this is a great discussion topic and a subject which seems to inspire on shortage of opinions! Jae Gruber

End of Content

End of Content