KikiFan
<font color=darkorchid>I just couldn't believe som
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2006
- Messages
- 2,229
I am totally against them. I would never have lasted in a school where everyone had to look alike, I was to unique for that! I recently went through this with the principal of my daughters school, they were asking who would be in favor of school uniforms and I said no way, my 7 year old daughter will not wear anything with buttons, snaps, zippers, ties, nothing tucked and no skirts of any type-and the material can't be hard or the shirts can't be long enough where they touch her wrists, so no way in heck would a uniform work for her...2 other people also said their children had sensory issues and would never go for school uniforms. So-no uniforms for us!
My daughter marches to her own drummer, she has her own ideas of the clothes she wants to wear and most are not what other kids wear so I am very happy she is not part of the herd just following along. I don't want her to be another face in the crowd of all the same clothing. It takes 2 minutes inthe morning to pick out what she wants to wear, no big deal in that.
You know, maybe I'm just cranky tonight but I honestly found your comments to be really insulting. So kids who willingly wear uniforms can't be unique? For the record, my daughter goes to a performing arts school. She's an actress and a singer and she's about as unique as it gets.
Even within the structure of the uniform there is a lot room for individuality. My daughter daughter loves making funky belt, hair band and earring combos. A uniform doesn't turn every kid into a robot. But it does lead them to channel ing their creativity into other areas. My daughter loves making her own jewelery and will even sew a hair band if she can't find one to match.
Someone commented that kids will still tease each other about clothes and where they were purchased. But I haven't found that to be the case. Once you remove logos from the equation, most kids couldn't tell an Izod from a Target polo.
And it's not just about the "name brands" It's also about quantity of clothing. It's a lot harder to miss if a kid is wearing the same outfit every week when they wear "street clothes" But in a uniform no one notices. So the families that can only afford a few outfits aren't singled out.