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Evaluation of a Twelve Months Homemaking ProgramEvans, Mary Elizabeth 01 1900 (has links)
It is the purpose of this study to evaluate certain aspects of growth in the pupils of Wylie High School who participated in the twelve months homemaking program during the period of time extending from September 1, 1948, until September 1, 1949.
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Relative Effectiveness of Two Methods of Teaching Personal Development to Homemaking GirlsFagg, Carmen Bernice 06 1900 (has links)
The question as to whether to teach personality development as a separate unit or to include it as an integral part of the total homemaking program became a problem which required careful investigation. It became the purpose of this study, therefore, to determine whether more measurable growth in personality is achieved by teaching a special unit in personality than by including such subject matter as an integral part of the homemaking program.
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Effectiveness of the Problem-Solving Method in Developing Thinking Ability in Homemaking StudentsBaker, Frances Basye 08 1900 (has links)
This study attempts to compare the thinking abilities of homemaking girls with the thinking abilities of girls not taking homemaking. By emphasizing the problem-solving method in the teaching of an experimental unit, it proposes to determine whether homemaking students show greater gains in thinking ability at the end of the school year than non-homemaking students. The investigator proposes to find out if the student taught by techniques of problem-solving forms thinking habits superior to habits formed by those students who have not been taught by this method as extensively as homemaking students.
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An Analysis of Grooming Problems of the High School GirlBurks, Jasmine Rudd 06 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to analyze the grooming problems of high school girls in Oakwood High School, and to compare the grooming problems of girls who have had a clothing course in Home Economics to those who have not.
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The Appraisal of the Practice of Homemaking in the Dallas Junior High SchoolsEnderby, Lillian 05 1900 (has links)
The problem in this study is to make the appraisal of the practice of homemaking in the Dallas junior high schools.
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Implications for the Homemaking Program Found in the Home Activities of Junior High School GirlsMcLean, Estella Price 08 1900 (has links)
The purposes of this study are these: (1) To determine the types of home activities carried on by junior high school girls; (2) To determine the time spent on these activities; (3) To determine the extent to which the activities are self-directed; (4) To point out some implications which these activities have for the school homemaking program.
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A Study of the Interest of Junior and Senior High School Girls in the Various Home Activities Performed by ThemHoff, Hannah Pauline 08 1900 (has links)
The study herein described was made of the seventy-nine girls in the junior and senior high school (grades 8, 9, 10, 11, 12) of the Public School of Cranfills Gap, Texas. The study was made with the purpose of finding the interests of this group of girls in the activities required of them in their homes, so that the writer might use the information gained in building a more successfully functioning program of homemaking in the Cranfills Gap Public School.
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Reasons checked for choosing a home economics curriculum by a group of college freshman and senior women in home economicsScott, Mary Louise January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas State University Libraries
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Professional socialisation of family ecology and consumer science students at South African UniversitiesCornelissen, Judith Jean 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis(PhD)--University of Stellenbosch, 2006. / Professional socialisation can be described as a subconscious process whereby persons
internalise behavioural norms and standards and form a sense of identity and commitment
to a professional field. The primary goal of professional socialisation is considered to be
internalisation of the professional culture and the development of a professional identity. It
is learned through interaction with professionals and educators during a student’s
education. It is a continuous, life-long process of learning formal knowledge, skills and
rules, as well as informal and tacit knowledge, norms, values and loyalties within the
profession. An understanding of the professional socialisation process is vital to all persons
involved in postsecondary education, for it is the professional socialisation process that
allows education to achieve its goals.
This dissertation determined whether students of Family Ecology and Consumer Sciences
in South Africa are professionally socialised into developing a professional identity within
the Family Ecology and Consumer Sciences profession. The objectives of the research
included; to examine through a literature review the development of the profession and to
propose a new position for the profession in South Africa; to identify the factors that
influenced South African students when they decided on Family Ecology and Consumer
Science as a field of study and the factors that influenced them while they were obtaining
their degree at a South African university; to determine whether Family Ecology and
Consumer Science students evidence the developmental stages of the Cohen model of the
professional socialisation process; to determine Family Ecology and Consumer Science
professionals’ perceptions of their professional preparation environments; and to analyse
and compare Family Ecology and Consumer Science programmes at South African
universities.
A quantitative research methodology in the form of an analytical survey was undertaken
with the participation of students and staff at South African universities where Family
Ecology and Consumer Science programmes are offered by means of postal questionnaires. Three questionnaires were used in the research, namely; the Professional Socialisation
Influences (PSI) questionnaire; the Professional Socialisation Staging Scale (PS3)
questionnaire; and the Emphases, Process and Influences on the Professional Preparation
Programmes questionnaire. A conceptual framework was used to compare the Family
Ecology and Consumer Science professional preparation programmes presented at South
African universities..
Descriptive statistics and the factor analysis method were used to examine the objectives to
determine which factors influenced students to select Family Ecology and Consumer
Sciences and the factors that influenced them while they were studying for a degree at a
South African university. Descriptive statistics, ANOVA and Bonferroni Post-Hoc tests
were used to examine whether Family Ecology and Consumer Science students evidenced
the developmental stages of the Cohen model of the professional socialisation process.
Descriptive statistics were used to examine Family Ecology and Consumer Science
professionals’ perceptions of their professional preparation environments.
The main findings drawn from the study indicated that Family Ecology and Consumer
Sciences students, when selecting Family Ecology and Consumer Science as a profession,
were influenced by the ‘Service Ideal’ and ‘Entrepreneurial’ factors. Aspects that elicited
the highest percentage of positive responses from the respondents were; ‘desire to help
others’; ‘a desire to improve the quality of family living’; ‘a desire to help people learn to
do things’; and ‘entrepreneurial possibilities of the course’.
While studying for a degree in Family Ecology and Consumer Science, they were
influenced by the factors ‘Student Interaction’ and ‘Departmental Influences’. Aspects such
as; ‘career opportunities available’; ‘application of what I learned to my personal life’; and
‘employment opportunities available’; were those that had the biggest influence.
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An Analysis of the Background Variables of Negro High School Youth in the Texas Cooperative Youth StudyScott, Lottie Ed 08 1900 (has links)
The purpose of the Texas Cooperative Youth Study was to gather basic data on the problems and interests of youth from youth themselves, their teachers, and their parents in the stages of early, middle, and late adolescence. The study was made to determine interests, attitudes, and concerns of youth in relation to home and family life; to determine whether homemaking education in the school takes into account these concerns and attitudes; and to find out whether interest in homemaking education is related to selected background and sociological variables.
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