Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Dress code dilemmas




I can think of a single K-12 school that doesn have a dress code. Perhaps they exist, but I never heard of one. What exactly does that mean? I was suspended for dying my hair purple. That was deemed undue attention. Trouwjurken Met Kant tank tops seems pretty straight-forward. But I see girls wearing tank tops at school every day. Sometimes they wear them all day long and then get to me seventh period and I tell them to go to the office. Their response, of my other teachers cared, makes sense to me. To tell the truth, I don care if they wear tank tops. I don believe that it distracts from the learning process in any way. I send them to the office because that what I supposed to do. If we make a set of rules, teenagers will immediately test them. When they find out that those rules are inconsistently enforced, they will continue to test and push and point out the flaws in the system. Is it really all that important that we completely ban tank tops? Or prevent kids from dying their hair purple? The number of rules, the mouwloos avondjurken vague wording, and the inconsistency of enforcement mouwloos avondjurken make our dress codes a joke. If we could reduce our rules down to just a few that are actually important to the children safety and health, we could make a dress code that works.


No comments:

Post a Comment