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Gender Stereotypes Against Dress Codes

Decent Essays

“Nineteen percent of the 7,800 students in middle and high schools across the country said they were prevented from wearing clothes deemed ‘inappropriate’ based on their gender” (Sorto, 2016). Considering the number of students surveyed, this percentage is significantly larger than one would think. This survey demonstrates that teenagers constantly feel victimized by their dress codes when class is stopped in order for them to be told to cover up. The issue of sexist dress codes has started a movement all around the United States, and other countries as well, with women fighting back. Protests and petitions have been made and although there has been some progress, there are still ways to go. Girls have been sent home from school, women have …show more content…

“In Florida, students were publicly shamed for violating dress code by being forced to wear ‘shame suits’” (Sorto, 2016). Creating a disruption in class to force a girl to change her clothes distracts her from her education, as well as humiliates and shames her. “Another girl, in Virginia, said it was sexist to label what she was wearing unprofessional and then force her to wear ‘dress code’ sweatshirt and pants” (Schrobsdorff, 2015). This is hypocrisy since not being “dress code” was unprofessional, but wearing sweats was not. Furthermore, it tells women that they should cover up their bodies completely to be deemed “professional,” illustrating the sexism ruling these dress codes. “While some administrators checked skirt lengths with the ‘thumb test’ by measuring hemlines against the tips of the fingers, many schools famously administered the ‘kneeling test’—requiring girls to submissively kneel down at the front of the class to make sure skirts touched the floor” (Lovell, 2016). Although this rule took place years ago, the fact that teachers made only girls do this is both extremely sexist and humiliating. Dress coding girls in front of the class teaches girls that they are lesser than men with submissive kneeling. Instead of politely pulling girls aside to inform them that they have broken the dress code, schools …show more content…

For example, “Oklahoma student Rose Lynn scribbled on her shirt what a school administrator told her when she was sent home for violating dress code. ‘If it doesn’t cover your crotch,’ her shirt read. ‘You’ll distract the boys’” (Sorto, 2016). This statement immediately teaches girls that they are lesser than boys from a young age and that the boys’ education is more important than theirs. Furthermore, this makes it appear as though it is the girl’s fault in this situation, putting the job on her to make sure the boys do not get distracted. One woman, who was dress coded at work, stated, “Her employment agency, Portico, had a dress code specifying that female workers must wear non-opaque tights, have hear with ‘no visible roots,’ wear ‘regularly re-applied’ makeup, and appear in shoes with a heel between two and four inches high” (Lawless, 2017). These rules are targeted directly to females as if saying that the way they look is more important than their actual job. Women should never have to put up with unfair rules made by sexist men in order to make a living. A student stated, “‘My principal constantly says that the main reason for [it] is to create a ‘distraction-free learning zone’ for our male counterparts’” (Staff, 2016). This again proves the sexism of dress codes since administration has no problem disrupting a girl’s education in order to

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