The memory of the frustration over the many, many obnoxious rules at my schools stays with me. And those memories are part of the list of reasons that I homeschool DS.
When i started elementary school we had normal rules. Then the principal changed and she came in with all sorts of arbitrary nonsense. I grew up in San Jose, CA, where it can get rather hot. Our classrooms were built for ventilation, but did not have air conditioning. This lady came in from wherever she was from and banned normal shorts. This was the 70s, preppies weren't "in" quite yet, but she wanted us to find bermuda style shorts, which just did not exist in our area, at the time. Let alone for young kids. She also banned flip flops (or "thongs" as well called them). My friends and I were good kids, but some were advanced in knowledge of naughty things, and we would talk about how she must have a weird "thing" for toes, and she wants to hide them from her sight. Sandals were OK, but not thongs/flipflops! And while there might have been some horrid thong/ff incident at her old school, there were no problems at our school...
That was just elementary school, and just two of the rules.
I think the shootings at Columbine really changed how schools have certain rules. In DD"s schools, as soon as you get in the school, go to your locker put your coat away, no coats allowed in class.
I find the two posts really interesting, the ones that were made by people who know the rules at Columbine, that show that the actual school where it happened do NOT have those rules.
Schools that don't allow coats are obviously not like my school, which had outdoor corridors. It's definitely a regional thing. Because even though my part of CA didn't get "cold", for native Californians, 50 degrees IS cold, and requires a coat (and mittens and scarves etc, for some people), and to go without a coat at passing period would have been very unfortunate.
Not to mention that we didn't have homeroom AND didn't have lockers!
Simply ban the consumption of alcohol on school premises. If the problem is alcohol then address the actual problem.
Don't want guns and knives? Then ban guns and knives, not handbags.
I agree. The rules about those things are already in place. Just work with that.
Maybe, I wonder at the judgement of a parent who would allow their child to go out the door without eating something even if its only something small to give their bodies some fuel to start their day.
You *really* do not know people who can't deal with food early in the day. My mom ALWAYS made me eat something before school, and I was nauseated for at least half the day because of it. I just canNOT deal with food in the early morning, and it makes me sick most of the time. And I've always been like this.
Well-as a kid who was always "pushing the rules" we used to take oranges and inject them with vodka--so while we sat at lunch eating our "healthy lunch" we were eating a vodka laced orange!
Oh man, now I'm rethinking all of my "healthy" friends who brought fruit...
My best friend senior year would bring sealed juice bottles. But they weren't sealed. She would drink half of the drink in the morning, replace it with cheap champagne her parents ALWAYS had around, and then sit and drink it through the day. Never once got caught. (and I was always sort of sure she was lying about it, so I just avoided her when she was sipping from it)
My biggest issue is why the kids have to buy the gym uniform. Why aren't reg black nylon shorts and a blue tshirt(with no writing) ok? This is FL- the kids are running the track everyday in 90 degree heat sometimes in 7th or 8th grade-so I'm supposed to wash it nightly?
We had polyester shorts for PE, and no, we didn't wash them every day. We brought the cotton top and those shorts home for the weekend. Gosh, how pleasant!
How about a Performing Arts HS where you MUST practice every night but cannot bring instruments on the bus?
That just hurts my brain....
I haven't read the entire thread only a few posts but allowing me to say this:
Banning bookbags:
I clearly and vividly remember being a teenager. It is physically impossible to carry 5 notebooks, or a huge binder, plus books, pens, pencils and any other crap in your arms all day. Something is bound to get lost, it's not about them not being responsible it's just physically impossible. You can't do it as an adult, never mind as a teenager, not to mention that in the run from classroom to classroom 10 things fall from you.
I find this to be MOST intruiging.
Because my junior/middle school banned normal lockers before I got there, as did my high school. We had lockers for PE, but we were absolutely positively NOT allowed to keep anything but PE stuff in there, and even if we tried to put books in there, we were absolutely positively NOT allowed to go into the gym for ANY reason when it wasn't our PE class.
And backpacks were absolutely positively NOT something that any of us, apart from one weird guy I can think of, were ever going to do at that time.
So we carried our books. ALL of our books. Every day. Throughout the day. Until either you started driving to school or you had a friend who did, and then you'd keep post-lunch books in your car until lunch when you'd swap, and HOPE that no one broke into your car and stole your stuff. (because if they did, you would get to pay for all of your books AND buy another set)
Trapper Keepers with the pencil thing inside of it on the bottom, with peechees etc inside, and books stacked on top. Girls carried them in the girl way, boys carried them in the boy way (though I found the boy way to be more comfy, and occasionally embarrassed my friends by carrying them on my head).
The kids older than me just could not refrain from setting fires in the lockers, hiding drugs in their lockers, and whatever ELSE they might have done, so the school administrations yanked them out.
When - and why - did it become necessary for kids to carry water bottles around in school all day? Are we just talking about schools in year-round warm climates?
It's definitely something I wonder about! But I'm sure you've noticed that people drink more water than they used to. In school I would stop by the drinking fountain for a moment every so often (perhaps for longer if at recess on a hotter day), and I remember drinking a Coke at lunch in high school (back when sweetened with cane sugar of course), and when I got home from my evening jogs-with-the-malamute I would drink some ice water, but my consumption of water was *nothing* like it is now. Kinda weird!
The only one that I thought was petty for this year was the banning of the feathers that the girls are having put into their hair. I mean I don't think a feather in the hair would interfere w/ learning?
Schools have always seemed to think that odd colors in the hair are incredibly distracting. I remember it being so in the early 80s, too.
And my mom got in trouble in the 50s when the swimming she did over the summer turned her hair green, because it was too distracting.
At graduation, we were all warned against throwing our caps. Anyone who threw their cap would not get a diploma.
We had the same rule. We had to show our caps (and we were made to label our caps before the ceremony) to the diploma people after the ceremony, to get our diplomas (we got nothing at actual graduation, this was afterwards).
To top it off, my kids have never once been in trouble at school. So my kids are being punished ....for other kids behavoir.
I can't stand being punished because others have done something wrong. There were 3 boys in my small class through elementary that were "bad", and NOTHING and NO ONE could stop them from it. The teachers just couldn't work out a punishment that worked (these boys lived for detention and would have LOVED to be kicked out, and their parents probably wouldn't have cared much either) so they resorted to punishing all of us, continuing to think that the boys actually cared about us, or that we were powerful enough to control them. A teacher actually had a nervous breakdown towards the end of our 5th grade class because of them and the impossibility of punishing them so they would behave. But the mass punishments continued!