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An identification of and a comparison between trends in clothing and textiles in a selected group of colleges and universities

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title An identification of and a comparison between trends in clothing and textiles in a selected group of colleges and universities
Names Jacobsz, Maretha Stephanie (creator)
Creekmore, Anna Mary (advisor)
Date Issued 1963-07-24 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1964
Abstract The purpose of this study was to identify the most recent
trends in Clothing and Textiles, to find whether any relationship
existed between them, and whether there was difference of emphasis
between large and small schools.
The information about existing trends in Clothing and Textiles
was collected from literature published in Clothing and Textiles
Teachers Conference Reports and in Home Economics journals
In addition, twenty catalogs from schools offering majors in Clothing
and Textiles were analyzed for course content and educational objectives.
The schools were divided in large and small categories
according to the number of students enrolled as majors in Home
Economics.
From the literature it was concluded that the following
four pairs of opposing trends existed: development of creative
abilities, the development of skills; breadth in subject matter,
depth in subject matter; family centeredness, subject matter orientation;
general education, and professional education.
A questionnaire was devised which tested the opposing
trends in the four areas of Clothing and Textiles (clothing construction,
clothing selection, textiles, and consumer economics).
The face-validity was checked by nine faculty members experienced
in the area of Clothing and Textiles, and rechecked by three
Home Economics department heads and one textiles advisor, before
it was finally sent out. The questions in the first part were
indirect forced-choice type and referred only to the beginning
courses. In Part II, the eight trends were independently listed
and each department head was asked to rate her department as to
the amount of emphasis given on the issues.
The questionnaires were sent to 112 colleges and universities
in the United States which offered Clothing and Textiles as a
major in their Home Economics program. The chairmen of the
departments were asked to participate and to return the completed
questionnaires, of which 54 percent were returned,
The returned questionnaires were statistically analyzed in the following way: means were determined for the trends for the
indirect questions in Part I and for the ranking of trends in Part II
in order to determine whether the trends existed and which were
considered most important; Pearson r correlations were used
to find the relationships between any of the trends in Part I, in
Part II, and between Part I and Part II; t-test of mean differences
between large and small schools were computed for each trend to
find whether the difference was significant; and an analysis of
variance was performed to find the significance of variance within
the four areas of Clothing and Textiles in each of the trends.
Data collected revealed that the mean scores of trends
differed and that breadth in subject matter scored highest in
both parts of the device. Significant correlations existed between
all trends in the indirect questions, and between a few trends in
the direct rating scale. The relations of creativity in the latter
with breadth, depth, family centeredness and subject matter were
the most significant. Correlations existed between some of the
trends in both parts of the questionnaire, namely: breadth, family
centeredness, between general and family centeredness, and
between professional and depth. The opposing trends were in the
negative direction. The significant relations of all trends in the
beginning courses might be due to the tendency to teach the
mastery of skills, breadth in subject matter with subject matter
emphasis in the professional curricula.
There were no significant differences in the mean scores
between large and small schools but significant F ratios were
found within the four areas of Clothing and Textiles for each pair
of variables for the small schools and between one pair of variables
for the large schools.
An analysis of the course offerings, course content, and
educational objectives were made from the catalog material. This
revealed differences between small and large schools in general
requirements for graduation and course offerings in Clothing and
Textiles. Based on this information it was concluded that the small
schools were more concerned with individual development of the
students through a wide variety of general education courses, while
the larger schools offered more courses within Clothing and Textiles
and were more concerned with preparation for a professional
career.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Clothing and dress -- Study and teaching
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/49057

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