Dietetic Technician · Florida

Dietetic Technician colleges in Florida

Dietetic Technician program coverage in Florida is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.

A Dietetic Technician program trains you to assist registered dietitians by screening patients, planning and preparing meals for special diets, and helping run food-service operations.

We're still verifying Dietetic Technician programs in Florida. Try a broader search at /results?q=Dietetic Technician or browse all colleges in Florida.

What you'll study in a Dietetic Technician program

  • Principles of normal and therapeutic nutrition across the life cycle
  • Meal planning and food preparation for modified diets such as low-sodium, diabetic, renal, and texture-altered
  • Nutrition screening, intake documentation, and the recordkeeping that supports the nutrition care process
  • Food handling, safety, sanitation, and HACCP standards for kitchens and service lines
  • Use and maintenance of commercial food-service equipment
  • Quantity food production, portion control, and recipe scaling
  • Menu costing, inventory, purchasing, and food-service administration
  • Reinforcing diet education and communicating with patients and clients under a dietitian's direction
  • Basic anatomy, physiology, and the role of nutrients in health and disease

Where a Dietetic Technician degree can lead

  • Dietetic Technician
  • Diet Technician (Hospital or Clinical)
  • Food Service Supervisor
  • Nutrition Assistant
  • Diet Aide
  • Community Nutrition Program Aide

Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 dietetic technicians median $37,040).

A Dietetic Technician program prepares you to work alongside registered dietitians by carrying out the hands-on parts of nutrition care and food service. Coursework grounded in the federal classification covers the principles of normal and therapeutic nutrition, basic food preparation and meal planning for specific dietary needs, food handling, and the safety and sanitary standards that govern a kitchen or service line. You learn to operate and maintain food-service equipment, read and follow modified-diet orders such as low-sodium, diabetic, renal, or texture-altered menus, screen patients for nutrition risk, document intake, and reinforce diet education that a dietitian has set. Programs also build administrative skills like menu costing, inventory, portion control, and the recordkeeping that keeps a department running. Where Nutrition and Dietetics centers on the science of assessing patients and designing medical nutrition therapy, this program focuses on putting those plans into practice, assisting the dietitian and managing the day-to-day food and nutrition tasks.

Most students enter through a community college associate degree or certificate, and many programs include supervised practice in a clinical or food-service setting. Graduates who complete a program accredited for this purpose may be eligible to sit for a national exam to become a registered nutrition and dietetic technician, a credential several states recognize; certification and any state requirements are set by the credentialing body and your state, so confirm them before you enroll. Graduates often work in hospitals, long-term care and rehabilitation facilities, school and corporate food service, public-health and community nutrition programs, and clinics. A program is preparation for the exam and for entry-level work, not a guaranteed job, and pay and demand vary by employer, region, setting, and the experience and credentials you build over time.

In federal data for the closely related occupation of dietetic technicians, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $37,040 and projects employment to grow about 2.5% from 2024 to 2034; an associate's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.

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