Home Economics
Approval Rate: 71%
Reviews 40
by molfan
Thu Apr 29 2010it was okay in junior high school had cooking and sewing. i was awful at sewing. remember the nine week long project i had to sew a jumpsuit. It was a disaster by the time i was finished I had a growth spurt and it did not fit. in high school I did not take it. by high school it was considered a real nerdy class{ even though I was a kind of a nerd} and you would have been tortured if you took home ec in high school.besides the teacher was a real battle ax. by the time my kids got to high school there was no home ec. oh well. an okay experience.I did learn some tips about cooking way back then so thanks Ms. Strom way back in the 70s.
by bird808
Thu Apr 29 2010I didn't enjoy Home Economics in school as much as I would have liked to. We had one woman who was our teacher during my first year of high school who was an absolute bat and her hygiene was much to be desired (Humming armpits if you know what I mean). All she did was shout and she seemed miserable. By the time I did get a decent teacher in my third year I'd lost interest in the subject and couldn't see myself progressing any further. Some of the food we made in my first and second year I wouldn't have fed a dog or a homeless person that muck. It truly was disgusting. Cooking should be fun and bring people together. I'm someone that loves and appreciates good food and company. So it only makes sense to want to cook and prepare something you appreciate with people you like.
by frankswildyear_s
Tue Oct 13 2009I elected to take Cooking I think it was in grade 9. I'm pretty sure it was because I liked my chances of meeting girls in that class over Wood Shop. I lucked out and got into a group with a girl I liked but had to put up with her pain-in-the-ass best friend too. I learned enough to enable me to get around in the kitchen without starting any major fires. Unlike oscar's experience, the teacher was a coyly sexy, youngish, English woman who made sure the two males in the class enjoyed the experience, in hopes of encouraging integration. She wasn't quite as smokingly hot as the French teacher but close, in a buttoned down sort of way.
by fitman
Tue Sep 22 2009My father signed up for home-ec in the '30s when he learned that students got to eat all that they cooked. He was the only boy in Greenwich who valued nutrition over image.
by irishgit
Tue Sep 22 2009I took this in grade 11 because my girlfriend at the beginning of the year was in it. I learned how to make a cake, and I learned how to respond to fellatio. Two different teachers though.
by oscargamblesfr_o
Tue Sep 22 2009A stupid and useless course in my experience, taught by some of the most miserable women I've ever met.The exclusive province of evil, miserable, frigid, man hating, sex outlawing, middle aged, thoroughly unattractive shrill women with WC Fields noses and frizzy, graying buns, who thought that making males make Toll House cookies and sew and other emasculating things would somehow make the memory of the one mediocre lay they had had back in 1970 better.
by osagepony
Tue Sep 22 2009Called "Bachelor Living" in my ancient high school days. The boys demanded the class as "Home Ec." remained ladies only. We expected segregation of the sexes. Cookies and pizza baking with a solid intro to sewing on buttons. Today, they mix the sexes in "Domestic Engineering" or "Life Skills" classes. "Sim" marriages, mortgage payments, rubber babies that cry, pizza, cookies, and button sewing. Mandatory "A."
by chalky
Mon Sep 21 2009I didn't really care for home economics. Once we had to sew a stuffed animal but my mom ended up sewing it for me. On another note, I don't think I'd trust anything out of my middle school kitchen. Those kids in the picture look like they're having a good time though.
by mr_matt
Sat Aug 02 2008you can learn this stuff from your parents
by paula5816
Mon Jul 21 2008I loved this class primarily because we got to be creative, also because I think it's just one big social experiment anyway!!!!
by punkluv2000
Fri Jul 18 2008Can be useful but isn't for me when I could learn most of that stuff on my own.
by crystal911
Fri Jul 11 2008love to cook
by jessie_loo
Thu Jun 26 2008i love cookin desertz then eatin them...plus had sum good memories =)
by brenden
Fri Jun 20 2008It isn't too bad..
by oo_michelle_oo
Thu Jun 19 2008Major waste of time and the teacher I had was a pain in the ass.
by myspace_376284524
Wed Jun 04 2008i dont find intreasting at all
by g8rhoo
Sat May 31 2008Did anyone ever learn anything in Home Ec that that actually used after leaving the classroom? I doubt it.
by myspace_270507871
Wed May 28 2008I like to cook pure and simple
by myspace_30849171
Tue May 06 2008Non-existant. Kinda wish I'd had it
by genghisthehun
Tue Apr 29 2008Never took it but lots of people I know did. Is this still offered?
by trebon1038
Mon Apr 28 2008These classes were a little sexist in the seventies but were kind of fun. We did mock marriages and stuff. Pretty funny.
by uncnc08
Fri Mar 21 2008An easy A,we had a cool teacher the first part of the semester we baked which was fun,but the second half we stiched,which was not fun for me.but we learned how to sew on a button which to this day I can't do.
by xagent
Mon Feb 18 2008I took wood shop instead. Sorry.
by ladyjesusfan77_7
Mon Feb 18 2008I always enjoyed cooking in home economics, but to be quite honest, I learned mostly from my mother.
by fb61200893
Sat Nov 10 2007All I remember is fear and incompetence.
by twansalem
Tue May 01 2007Really just a waste of time. You can learn this stuff at home, take a more useful class while you are in school.
by mad_hatter
Fri Mar 09 2007I took this course to kill time, honestly. I already knew how to cook. The great thing is, lunch was just before this class, so we got to make lunch.
by drummond
Fri Mar 09 2007In the 7th grade we made the best pumpkin pie I'd ever had. Anybody remember the flattened pillsbury pop muffin dough mini-pizzas?
by graymalkin
Sat Jul 09 2005Home economics was no longer a required course when I went to school. I never did take it, but I seem to recall the linger smell of burnt cookies in the hallways. I am not sure what the basic course description is now, there seems to be a lot of interest in younger people to learn cooking skills. Perhaps if along with the cooking and sewing, they had a segment on how to balance a checkbook, financing a car, reading the stock market and a few other basics of day-to-day economics, I might have taken it.
by canadasucks
Sat Jul 09 2005Great class to meet girls.
by kingguiness
Fri Jul 08 2005I dont think it should be essential. The topics could easily be covered in Sociology.
by hamchat1
Wed May 04 2005Home economics is important for life. Its better than the other subjects where 2 years later you forget it all.
by gentle_jude
Mon Feb 14 2005On a practical note, this subject would be a 4 (good to learn but not essential). Personally, this subject was OK. It all depended on the teacher. This subject was a very deceptive subject. When I first thought of home ec, I thought we'd be cooking and eating all of the time. That was far from the truth. 90% of the time, we were doing theory and only 10% of the time did we cook. I had a bit of a strict teacher too which didn't help! Plus you also learn about sowing. The only good thing about that subject was eating your practical assignments!
by mrpolitical
Tue Sep 28 2004I took a lot of grief for taking it in high school, but it was worth it. The class was very fun, a easy way to earn credit, and I learned how much I loved cooking in this class. Best elective ever!
by kristenx81
Tue Jul 13 2004Do schools even teach home economics any more? I took it in junior high school about ten years ago and I liked it. All you had to do to pass was show up and at least attempt to do the assigments. (I won't bother mentioning my little cooking fiasco here.)
by spazc7bc
Wed Aug 20 2003Cooking classes are really fun! And they are an easy credit!
by rebelyell1861
Fri Jul 11 2003I still have the shorts I made in 10th grade.
by snoopy
Fri Jul 04 2003I thought Home ec was fun. I loved the cooking, budgeting, and childcare units, but I didn't like the sewing and crafts units.
by bigbaby
Thu May 22 2003Home Economics where I am is made up of cooking, sewing, and Sex-Ed. Sex Ed is the greatest thing ever, and cooking is fun. Lost credit for horrible sewing. Still good.
by kamylienne
Thu May 22 2003Ah, learning to sew and cook. I'm still not exceptionally good at either, but at least I've gotten the basics down from those classes.