Disagree- School dress codes protect people from revealing too much skin in a professional area. Without dress code, students would be rebellious and take advantage of what is appropriate to wear. Given the sexual assaults due to revealing too much skin, gives the school the security to prevent this from happening.
There are many reasons why dress code should not be a policy at schools. The dress code usually targets girls and is completely sexist. Hardly is it ever the case where the male is getting dress coded. It’s always the girls who have shorts that are “too short” or are showing “too much” shoulders. Dress code is also often saying that it’s a girls responsibility to not distract
Many pro dress-code advocates say dress-codes decrease the chance of bullying, but there is nothing that shows that a change in clothing will stop a students chances of bullying another. A simple change of clothing will change nothing. There is even proof that dress-codes may increase violence attacks between students. "school uniforms increased the average number of assaults by about 14 [per year] in the most violent schools... a study found that school discipline incidents rose by about 12% after the introduction of uniforms. " This is the opposite of what pro dress-code users
The controversy about dress codes asks an important question: are dress codes targeting girls and transgender students? Several sites including:https://www.adl.org/education/resources/tools-and-strategies/table-talk/what's-fair-and-unfair-about-student-dress-codes, stated that when they spoke to girls they said they feel shamed and judged by dress codes. Are dress codes limiting students creativity. Should these girls really feel harassed men and boys at their school?
The results from the survey associated with VCU’s co-curricular activities highlighted the focus on one particular co-curricular opportunity, ASPiRE. The VCU Co-Curricular Program: Academic Scholars Program in Real Environment (ASPiRE), was established in 2012 to enrich and deepen students’ understanding of their capacity to create positive change in communities (Virginia Commonwealth University ASPiRE, 2012) and also due in part to a trend of low graduation rates in comparison to Virginia public state institutions; VCU identified in 2011 only 34% of their student population was graduating in four years (Hayes & DiPeppe, 2011). The establishment of the VCU’s ASPiRE program focused
54% of Schools across America enforce a strict dress code (infoplease web), and this is considered normal. So it is normal for schools to target young girls, and it is normal for girls to be punished for the reactions of others? Many schools have dress codes and many of them all follow the same rules. These rules are outrageous and these schools need to be stopped. We should have school dress codes rewritten because they specifically target young girls and their clothing choices.
There are many reasons why I believe that business should require dress codes for business. They should do this so that, as an employee for a specific job, like a nurse, you need to dress as if you know about your job, which means there are certain jobs that should require certain things to wear, such: nurses, doctors, lawyers,
Approximately 64% of the United States public education system requires a strict dress code. How does the dress code affect the students and how does it benefit them? Do the students have a say in this dress code policy? Do they have a fair vote on how dress code violations should be addressed? So many questions on how the students defend their rights in the public-school system, yet they cannot have the opportunity to have their opinions heard. Dress code amongst the years have changed amongst the years and not for the better. High School dress code is demoralizing towards females and the consequences are exorbitant.
The morning bell rings. One student comes into school in their new shorts, and then one of the teacher’s pull her aside and tell her to go to the principal's office. As-Is she walks into the office and the principle tells her to go home and change. Wait! Should this student go home just to change her shorts or stay at school and face the fact she may get in trouble? Well schools actually tend to just have a dress code for girls and not boys which is not fair. Plus clothing stores are selling clothing that students should not be wearing but when pre- teens buy a peice of clothing they wear it to school. And even though it sounds not very convincing there's actually a complicated issue with dress codes. Many
Do you like your school dress code? A dress code is a set of rules specifying the garb
The ringing of the alarm clock that is placed conveniently beside your bed wakes you. The sound startles your brain into getting out of your warm, cozy bed. It is time to go to school. You must wake up now in order to make it on time. If you are late again, your teacher will probably give you that nasty look of dismissal. What are you going to wear?
School Dress Codes: one of the most enforced school policies of all time for students of any age and gender. Of course, everyone has their opinion about what is too short or too long, what is too low or too high, and what is too tight or too loose; however, according to schools, middle school and high school girls are all “indecent”, or how the students put it, whorish. Because of this, there are very specific rules, right down to the T, about what girls can and cannot wear while on school grounds. As the handbook says, “Skirts, dresses, and shorts cannot be more than 2 ¼ inches above the knee.” Oh, and to make you moan and groan even more, “The inseam of your shorts has to be, at the very least, 4 inches long.” So they are trying to tell me and the rest of the student body that we can only wear long shorts? Is it just me, or does that bulls*** sound like an oxymoron? Wouldn’t long shorts be… what do you call them? Oh… pants?
Reinforcing The School's Dress code Elgin High School should make the rules equal to both genders because teachers have been more strict on females than males and that is not fair. Girls are always most likely to be called out on dress code than guys. The consequences they give to students are sometimes to extra for example, why send a student home for wearing slides? And clothing is not a distraction , how can clothes distract a person? Unless it has music playing with sparkling lights then
School dress code is possibly one of the most enforced rules in today's school system. Despite the issues of drugs, alcohol, or dangerous weapons on campus, the dress code system is clearly the most important issue in schools today. Who cares about the fighting, the bullying, or the education of students? A teenage girl's shoulder being shown is obviously much more distracting and dangerous to the school environment than kids throwing punches left and right.
Poe created his characters to represent Id, Ego, and Superego to help prove that the world cannot have an unequal balance of either personality, less everything comes toppling down. So, to top that statement off, “The Fall of the House of Usher” symbolizes unity and equality. For example, in the beginning of the story the narrator comes upon an eerie looking house from which he is well familiar of and finds it to have become broken down and eerie since his last visit. This shows already that two personality types that different cannot seem to manage without some sort of mediator between them.
Children and Teenagers express themselves by what they wear. That is one of the biggest arguments schools have and the overall biggest problems is dress code. Teenagers and children like to feel free and wear things that make them unique. Dress codes does not really affect the way students learn. I think that children should be able to wear what they want to school and not get sent home for it being to provocative or inappropriate.