Constructing a CultureMain MenuConstructing a CultureIntroduction: A Snapshot in TimeSensible SchoolingSetting the Stage for Visual CultureSee and Hear!Incorporating Audio-Visual Education into the ClassroomLife Adjustment MovementPhilosophy of education in which students are "adjusted" to American life.Films in the ClassroomNew Film Helps GirlsCreating a Visual Culture through Print MediaIn the Beginning: A Brief History of LIFE MagazinePost War Teen TuningThe Building Blocks of Visual CultureAboutThis page describes the methodology behind the developed. Team member introductionBibliographyMaureen Kudlik07ec8ebdd0fbeaba49b25d2b198d84b9712cd0d6Micah Ariela1e838a35a85c5d3e09b44fd8da4e45888d7b1efJessica Martineze6106ba1d3fdd6a087256fecb73a84263965399aVince Sandrif1c5ba0a4f7b96b251ed23b27f5bd5ddc781e56b
1940's Hairstyle
12016-03-08T12:53:24-08:00Maureen Kudlik07ec8ebdd0fbeaba49b25d2b198d84b9712cd0d683362Their hair is what they like to fuss over most. Betty and Barbara and their friends wear it shoulder-length and, where the 1944 teen-ager brushed her hair each night, they have turned to using the comb. Hair is washed regularly at least once a week and combed everywhere and as often as the girls can manage it.plain2016-03-10T10:23:48-08:001947-08-04Maureen KudlikEnglishLeen, Nina. “Tulsa Twins: They Show How Much the Teen-Age World has Changed.” LIFE Magazine: August 4, 1947: 77-82. Google Books. Accessed January 7, 2016. https://books.google.com/books?id=1U0EAAAAMBAJ&lpg=PP1&pg=PA77#v= twopage&q&f=false.PrintNina Leen2016030814405120160308144051Maureen Kudlik07ec8ebdd0fbeaba49b25d2b198d84b9712cd0d6