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Showing 406 to 420 of 549 results Save | Export
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Littrell, Mary Ann; And Others – Adolescence, 1990
Administered instruments measuring adolescents' dress concerns, body satisfaction, and eating behaviors to 751 adolescent girls. Items measuring clothing interests, body satisfaction, and eating behaviors were conceptually independent; clothing factors showed little or no correlation with either body satisfaction or eating factors. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Body Image, Clothing, Eating Habits
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Holloman, Lillian O. – Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development, 1989
Examined relationship between self-esteem and selected clothing attitudes among Black adults (N=80). Results revealed that both men and women showed positive correlations between self-esteem and clothing attitude statements on aesthetics and practicality. For males, there was negative correlation between self-esteem and attitudes on attracting…
Descriptors: Adults, Aesthetic Values, Attitudes, Blacks
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Johansen, Karol A. D.; Steele, Markell – Journal of Career Planning & Employment, 1999
Presents results of the UCLA career center's 1999 Business Attire Survey. The survey polled recruiters about appropriate apparel and accessories for students interviewing for entry-level jobs. Also discusses recruiters' responses beyond the survey questions that reflect corporate policy and personal opinions and help illuminate the quantitative…
Descriptors: Clothing, College Students, Employment Interviews, Higher Education
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Spruiell, Phyllis R.; Jernigan, Marian – Educational Gerontology, 1982
Investigated the clothing preferences and problems of older women, using personal interviews. Presents results of preferred styles in detail. Discusses implications of the research for gerontologists in higher education and for the American clothing industry. (RC)
Descriptors: Clothing, Design Preferences, Design Requirements, Females
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Hubble, Mark A.; Gelso, Charles J. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1978
Examined effects of counselor attire on clients' state anxiety, willingness to self-disclose, and counselor preference. Counselor attire was traditional, casual, and highly casual. Clients experienced lower anxiety with counselors in casual v highly casual attire. No differences emerged between traditionally and casually attired counselors. Client…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Clothing, Counselor Client Relationship, Counselors
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Dillon, Linda S. – Home Economics Research Journal, 1980
Describes a study designed (1) to determine any underlying considerations governing the perceptions of professional people as to the appropriateness of specific types of garment styles for female business dress and (2) to determine if a difference exists in the perceptions of appropriateness of garment styles by sex. (CT)
Descriptors: Clothing, Employed Women, Multidimensional Scaling, Professional Personnel
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Workman, Jane E.; Johnson, Kim K. P. – Journal of Home Economics, 1989
A study examined 197 college students' impressions of memory skills and personality of older adults and the relation of these impressions to clothing cleanliness and condition. It found that clothing cleanliness and coordination affected attitudes and also interacted with the gender of the older person to affect those impressions. (JOW)
Descriptors: Age Discrimination, Attitudes, Clothing, College Students
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Miller, Kimberly A.; And Others – Adolescence, 1993
Compared behavior of college students who wore costumes on Halloween with those who did not. Findings from 805 females and 448 males surveyed over 5-year period revealed significant associations between dressing in costume and drinking alcohol and between masquerading with group and using marijuana and other drugs. Found no significant…
Descriptors: Clothing, College Students, Drinking, Drug Use
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Dickson, Marsha A. – Journal of Consumer Affairs, 2001
Responses from 547 of 2,000 consumers indicated consumer support for socially responsible purchasing. For 16%, "No-Sweat" labels indicating the working conditions of apparel makers were a strong purchasing influence. Women, especially unmarried females with lower educational attainment, were most likely to purchase clothing with No-Sweat…
Descriptors: Clothing, Consumer Economics, Prediction, Purchasing
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Inman, Sally; Turner, Nola – Education, Citizenship and Social Justice, 2007
This article discusses some of the findings of research undertaken by the authors with secondary students in the London Borough of Newham. The research was concerned with exploring young people's understanding of cultural harmony and their views on the issues and challenges in creating cultural harmony in their schools and in their lives outside…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Environment, Culture Conflict, Racial Bias
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Yaroch, Amy L.; Reynolds, Kim D.; Buller, David B.; Maloy, Julie A.; Geno, Cristy R. – Health Education & Behavior, 2006
This article describes a validity study conducted among middle school students comparing self-reported sun safety behaviors from a diary with readings from ultraviolet (UV) monitors worn on different body sites. The UV monitors are stickers with panels that turn increasingly darker shades of blue in the presence of increasing amounts of UV light.…
Descriptors: Safety, Cancer, Validity, Clothing
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Hinton, Karen; Margerum, B. Jean – Adolescence, 1984
Surveyed high school students (N=184) to establish relationships between use of and attitudes toward used clothing and attitudes toward the ecology and economy. Results showed that as use increased, attitudes and economic and ecological concerns also became more positive, although 50 percent of the students disliked wearing used clothing. (JAC)
Descriptors: Adolescent Attitudes, Clothing, Ecology, Economics
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Eicher, Joanne B.; And Others – Adolescence, 1991
Explored role of dress through observation and interviews of high school students. Examined adolescent dress in relation to public, private, and secret self. Obtained data on descriptions of various social types: average, punks, freaks, and nerds. Extreme social types appeared to offer valuable reference points for average adolescents in…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Clothing, High School Students, High Schools
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Johnson, Kim K. P.; Workman, Jane E. – Home Economics Research Journal, 1992
Photographs shown to 98 male and 102 female students illustrated provocative versus nonprovocative clothing on both men and women. Subjects rated provocative clothing more likely to induce sexual harassment. Females who had not experienced harassment rated those wearing nonprovocative clothing unlikely to be harassed. (SK)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Attribution Theory, Clothing, Higher Education
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Kang, Jikyeong; Kim, Youn-Kyung – Family and Consumer Sciences Research Journal, 1998
Responses from 172 Chinese Americans, 185 Japanese Americans, and 144 Korean Americans revealed distinct reference group, media, and store attribute influences on clothing purchases. Patterns differed depending on degree of acculturation. (SK)
Descriptors: Acculturation, Asian Americans, Clothing, Consumer Economics
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