Box 10: National Home Economics Test Development Consortium (NHETDC)
Contains 51 Results:
Core questions
Part of the Truman State University Archives, this collection includes artifacts, audio-visual materials, manuscripts, photographs and print materials from Home Economics, which later became Family Sciences. The bulk of the materials are from the late 1960s through 1992, when the department began to close.
Test questions with answers marked
Part of the Truman State University Archives, this collection includes artifacts, audio-visual materials, manuscripts, photographs and print materials from Home Economics, which later became Family Sciences. The bulk of the materials are from the late 1960s through 1992, when the department began to close.
General Home Economics
Answers unmarked.
Core questions for Child Development test
Part of the Truman State University Archives, this collection includes artifacts, audio-visual materials, manuscripts, photographs and print materials from Home Economics, which later became Family Sciences. The bulk of the materials are from the late 1960s through 1992, when the department began to close.
Child Development full tests
Answers unmarked.
Clothing and Interior Design test
Answers unmarked.
Food and Nutrition questions
Answers marked.
Delivery confirmation/information
Part of the Truman State University Archives, this collection includes artifacts, audio-visual materials, manuscripts, photographs and print materials from Home Economics, which later became Family Sciences. The bulk of the materials are from the late 1960s through 1992, when the department began to close.
Test administration instructions
Part of the Truman State University Archives, this collection includes artifacts, audio-visual materials, manuscripts, photographs and print materials from Home Economics, which later became Family Sciences. The bulk of the materials are from the late 1960s through 1992, when the department began to close.
Proctor’s instructions (includes list of universities)
Part of the Truman State University Archives, this collection includes artifacts, audio-visual materials, manuscripts, photographs and print materials from Home Economics, which later became Family Sciences. The bulk of the materials are from the late 1960s through 1992, when the department began to close.