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5 Comments

  1. Charlotte A Orth says:

    I wish that my mother had taught me cooking and cleaning skills. I had to learn on my own! She was a perfectionist and did not let me do anything in the hope but wash dishes.

  2. In high school (graduated 1972) I tried to take wood shop, metal shop, and auto shop. Being a hands-on person, I would have excelled and enjoyed them. Because I was a girl, I was denied the classes and told I could take advanced home ec, family living, and mechanical drawing. It wasn’t until the last quarter of my senior year that a family threatened to SUE the district to get their daughter into auto shop. Too late for me, but a step in the right direction!

    1. Wow, Laura! Sounds like the less-than-enlightened stance that many high schools had back then. I graduated five years before you; I don’t recall whether our school district had such rules about shop classes. At least I was able to take photography & graphic arts. However, we girls could only wear pants a couple of days a year (Rodeo Week–in Tucson, AZ); we had to wear dresses or skirts the whole rest of the school year! (And they could be no shorter than our fingertips when our arms were hanging down by our sides.) Nowadays, I think there are few restrictions on what is worn OR what courses females can take, so I guess that’s progress.

  3. I took shop class and home ec in Grade 7 and 8. The girls took home ec 1 semester and the boys took shop and vise versa the next semester. They started that in the mid 80s at my school. I’m also a total Tomboy. I was always by my Dads side. I can change the oil in my car if need be. Spark plugs, battery, fill up fluids, check and change fuses and much more. I’m also quite capable of a lot maintenance work around the house too. When I moved for college at 19, I had more tools than makeup I think! lol. My Dad definitely prepared me to take care of myself and my car. My Mom showed everything else about the household. She’s an amazing cook and baker. I was raised in the country and I do believe that makes a difference. I do live in the city now. I love and appreciate my parents very much for how I was raised. Not very many kids get opportunities like I did. I truly believe I had the best of best worlds!

  4. This is a great guide for my godson and his wife later on. Their twins are 22 months. We’re trying to teach them at present is how to say Mama. They both lovingly call her Goo. I laugh every time they call her (in unison). I’m a terrible teacher.

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