When I was in Jr Hi we had a quarter each of Home Ec, Industrial Arts (woodwork), Art, and Music (not choir - more of a music appreciation type of class). Of those, the only class still available at my school is Art.
Home Ec disappeared one year after my teacher retired. They tried to cut it back and share a teacher with another school, the next year they just eliminated it.
Industrial Arts has kind of come and gone - they have something available there now, I'm not sure what it is - but I do know the kids in that class, in addition to whatever projects they do in the class, also help build the sets for the plays which includes hanging doors, building staircases, and whatever else the script requires. There are two plays a year.
Music - again, when my teacher retired....well, maybe not, we had another one of her former students who took her place initially, and she may have maintained those classes, but we have gone through a ton of Choir and Band directors in the past few years - enough that Band has disappeared. When I was in school we had a High School Choir and Band teacher (2 full-time positions) and a grade school Music teacher (a 3rd full time position - taught the grade schoolers singing and simple instruments). Now there is one Choir director who has to split their time between the grade school and the high school - there may be a part time music teacher for the younger grade schoolers. Band is gone, as is the Music appreciation classes.
Art we still have. But what worries me is that my old Art teacher is retiring at the end of this year (or maybe next year....but soon)
We did have - and still do have a required semester of Consumer's Ed. When I was in school I hated it. We were given an amount of "money" and at the beginning of the semester we had to "buy stocks" and track them throughout the semester and see who made or lost money by the end of the semester. We had other stuff too - but I couldn't tell you what it was.

My senior year I needed one more class to fill my schedule so I took Bookkeeping - that class I loved (and it was with the same teacher as Cons Ed) - in that class we had to balance checkbooks, and budgets. Granted it was running a business so we also had to do invoices and other stuff - but that was more useful than buying stocks. My youngest son had Cons Ed last year (my teacher is long gone) and his Cons Ed was more like my bookkeeping - at least as far as doing checkbooks, they had to choose a profession, find the average salary plus whether you would have to take a lot of schooling - in which case you had to budget student loans along with all your other expenses. It was a more worthwhile class than the one I had.
Our old Home Ec room is now the LifeSkills class room - that is not a class option for "regular" students, it is the classroom my middle son is in. It's an alternate classroom for kids with special needs. Instead of learning Algebra, they learn math in the real world - fractions in cooking, percentages for sales or for adding tax. Those kids realize if they have a dollar in their pocket and something costs a dollar that they do not have enough money because they need more for tax. The go shopping at the grocery store every month to buy what they need for their weekly cooking projects. So they have to go through the recipes that they have picked out for that month (they cook every Wednesday) and make a shopping list - they have to understand that if what they are cooking in 4 weeks requires milk that it will probably spoil if they buy it now so they will either move that recipe up earlier in their schedule, or they will ask the teacher to pick some up later - but they have to figure out that it is a problem. They have to check the dates on stuff in the store to see if it will still be good when they need it. They do a lot of other stuff in there that wouldn't hurt some of the "regular" kids to know how to do....
