Archive for the ‘school dress codes’ Category

Petaluma middle school decides girls’ leggings must be covered

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Teens at a middle school in Petaluma, Calif., can now only wear leggings if they’re covered with a garment such as shorts or a skirt. (Getty)

How tight is too tight for school? Administrators and teachers at a middle school in Petaluma, Calif., are asking themselves this question as they implement a new dress code policy around girls’ form-fitting pants.

Kenilworth Junior High has been making national news for prohibiting girls from wearing tight-fitting pants because they’re “distracting to teenage boys,” according to KTVU-TV.

Last Thursday, April 4, all the girls at Kenilworth Junior High were told to skip the last period of the day and instead report to a multi-use room where an administrator expressed concern over the tight-fitting pants female students were wearing to school, according to KTVU-TV. They were reportedly told that they would be sent home if they wore form-fitting pants.

Many students were frustrated and left thinking they could no longer wear the popular skinny jeans, yoga pants or leggings to school. “It takes away like half of my clothes because I have a lot of yoga pants and leggings, so everyone’s kind of like mad about it,” Makenna Mattei told KTVU.

“We didn’t think it was fair how we have all these restrictions on our clothing while boys didn’t have to sit through it at all,” Brittany Kruljack chimed in.

Parents were equally baffled by the new rule. “It is not our girls’ fault that these boys have quote ‘raging hormones’ they can’t control,” Lisa Simond, a parent at Kenilworth, told KTVU.

After the KTVU segment ran on Friday, April 5, news outlets across the country picked up the story and a string of mom bloggers wrote posts declaring the dress code ridiculous. And over at Cafe Mom Jeanne Sager shared her outrage over the school banning tight pants because they’re distracting to boys.

“You’ll have to pardon me for thinking here (after all, I’m just a girl, what do I know?), but wouldn’t it be a whole lot easier to sit the boys down for a talk and tell them to cool it?” Sager wrote. “Not only would it save the parents of every girl in the district from having to revamp their kids’ wardrobes, but it would prepare the boys for what will happen when they walk out into a dress code-free world where women walk around flaunting bare ankles and even, gulp, showing their knees!”

On Friday night, Kenilworth administrators issued a statement to its families:

With warmer weather and the arrival of Spring the bounds of the dress code were being tested. We had an assembly yesterday with our female students to discuss this issue based on input from staff and the rest of the Administration. The intent of yesterday’s message was to maintain a calm and focused environment for the remainder of the school year.

In my efforts to achieve this goal some of my statements went farther than they should have. We issued a clarification to parents and students that there has been no change in the dress code. We continue to prefer students to dress as if this were a business environment and they were coming to work. The guiding principle in all dress codes is that the manner in which students dress does not become a distraction in the learning environment and we get that guidance from California Education Code.

Kenilworth principal Kathy Olmsted clarified with SFGate that only leggings with no covering such as a skirt or shorts are banned. Skinny jeans and yoga pants are still allowed. (One Kenilworth student said to SFGate that that the girls were originally told that all tight pants are banned, but the school changed its policy after the outcry from students and parents and media attention.)

“This isn’t a change in our dress code,” Olmsted said. “Kenilworth school feels that appropriate attire contributes to a positive learning environment.”

“The concern my staff and I have is basically seeing underwear,” Kenilworth principal Emily Dunnagan told Inquisitr.com. “With girls, leggings can be very, very thin, and leggings are fine as long as there is something over the top of them. We want to keep the learning environment distraction-free.”

Olmsted says the school decided to meet with the girls because several teachers had complained that female students were wearing leggings that revealed their undergarments.

Olmsted was surprised by the media attention her school was getting but she said, “I think it’s leading us to have an important discussion over what clothing is appropriate for kids to wear to school.”

Schools across the country have made news headlines for introducing dress codes. Here’s a look at some of those stories.

10 most talked-about school dress code controversies

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School must be back in session. Stories about students violating dress codes are in the news.

This week, a 5-year-old Oklahoma boy was asked to turn his University of Michigan T-shirt inside-out at school because it featured an emblem for an out-of-state school.

The dress code at Wilson Elementary in Oklahoma City forbids “clothing bearing the names or emblems of all professional and collegiate athletic teams” except for Oklahoma colleges and universities, according to the NY Daily News. The guidelines were created because some sports logos are supposedly associated with gangs.

School dress codes are nothing new. Many people probably remember those more conservative days when boys weren’t allowed to march through the school doors in blue jeans and girls were forbidden from wearing pants. (And yes, they even wore skirts on snowy days and walked 10 miles uphill, both ways, to get to school…)

To keep up with the more relaxed, casual clothing trends, dress codes have evolved over the years. School administrators are no longer concerned about whether pants are pressed. They just want boys wearing their trousers around their waists, not their ankles. T-shirts were once forbidden, but now they’re daily attire—although most schools have rules addressing inappropriate logos. For example, a teen at a high school in New York was asked to not wear a T-shirt featuring a giant mug of frothy beer.

Sometimes schools make news headlines for their unusual, outrageous or downright hilarious dress codes, and sometimes the students breaking these rules get media attention. Above, we’ve put together a list of the 10 most talked-about dress code controversies. Are these rules outrageous or reasonable?