luvsJack
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2007
- Messages
- 20,362
OK, here's our dress code... it applies to all middle school students (not elementary or HS):
So, with the exception of saying "Girls may wear skirts that cover the knee", it seems pretty even male/female. There is nothing that says why there's a dress code. I've now had three kids go through this school. They all hated the dress code. I agree some of the rules seem silly (I've had to take a belt to oldest DD because she'd keep forgetting hers). But they're all pretty simple to follow. And yes, it usually is pretty hot when school starts back up in the fall. Too bad, no shorts.
As long as the dress codes are applied to boys and girls equally, I don't have a problem with them.
I do think it's funny... some on this thread hint (or flat out say) that their child shouldn't be uncomfortable, but if someone else is made uncomfortable by what others are wearing, "it's their problem". And it doesn't have to be anything with exposed skin... find a shirt with a NSFW image or wording on it... should kids be allowed to wear that?
As a former teenage boy, I'll admit there were times I was distracted by what the girls were wearing (and it wasn't always about what skin was showing).
There is a difference in wearing a shirt with something offensive on it and a middle school girl being made to feel uncomfortable because she is being measured daily. Big, huge difference. No one should be made to be uncomfortable in their own skin. So having an issue with her being made to feel like she can't wear shorts does not result in someone thinking its ok to wear offensive t-shirts.
Teen boys are distracted by teen girls. Period. It has nothing to do with clothes or fit of clothes. They just are.
I, personally, am not against dress codes; I have seen what having too lax of one can result in.
Didn't really have a problem with the uniforms but I do know they didn't do anything that they are said to do. They aren't necessarily cheaper than having to buy regular clothes--if you buy the inexpensive ones, they look like dishrags in a few weeks so you are just having to re-buy and that's a good trick once back to school sales are over. And the cheaper stores have a different cut than the more expensive ones and the kids can tell at one glance. So they don't keep down the "I have more money than you" mess. The only benefit I agree with is that if someone was to walk in to the hallway that doesn't belong there, the school police or the teachers can tell at a glance.
But even the shorts sold as "dress code approved" and the same shorts every kid in a school is buying can not pass the fingertip test on some girls. Girls are proportioned differently. If a teacher sees a girls whose shorts are obviously too short, calls the girl into the hall and has her measure the shorts to her fingertips; I don't have an issue with that. But having every girl stand and do it, especially when some are obviously NOT too short, is ridiculous. And sending a girl to the office to wait for someone to bring more clothes or sent home because her shorts are just a little above the fingertips is also ridiculous.