The strong dress code (formerly called uniforms) is an important means to maintain control and discipline is a highly diverse school environment. |
First: please note that you are offending me and my kid. Second: dress code helps unifying such a diverse community, where some kids could come to school with a $300 outfit, some others come from families where this figure amount to a sizeable portion of their monthly rent. IB mom (whose kid is one of those who could come to school with a $300 outfit) |
Ha ha - overreact much? You must be a troll and not a very good one at that. |
Oh that's very good! Thanks! Literally LOL |
| Public school uniforms just say, how to put it? Ghetto school. Sorry. |
Offended? What it the heavens is offensive about questioning the relative (if that) benefits of a school uniform? The number of public schools in DC with a "uniform" or "very restrictive dress code" number in the single digits, and none of them seem to have any problem whatsoever "unifying a diverse community" without a uniform. What's offensive is the way your mind works if you think your own pablum makes any logical sense. |
| Wow, they have uniforms at Hardy. Too bad the families that don't like uniforms don't enroll at Hardy and pressure the school to change the policy! But, I forgot, there are all those hostile OOB families along with the evil teacher who have dug a moat and filled it with alligators so the IB families can't get to the front office to enroll their children. Oh what a shame! Guess the school is stuck with the uniforms. |
Probably she/he did not like you comparing her kid's school to "a prison with a head warden smacking around a riding crop in their faces all the time". I probably would get offended too. |
Hardy's certainly the only public school west of Rock Creek Park to have uniforms, which makes it seem even more removed and remote from its surrounding community. |
| What's interesting is the defensiveness in questioning the patently outdated, ludicrous uniform policy at Hardy. It's like you've gotta drink the kool-aid once you send your kid there, because the truth is too annoying to accept. You might as well just goose-step your kid over to Hardy every morning if you're Ward 3, 'cos its too frustrating to deal with the brick wall protecting the kids from free expression. |
I'll betcha that teacher wouldn't like to be described that way, either.
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Ha ha "goose-step"! Nice try, pp! |
You can pretty much put a blank in the sentence. "What's interesting is the defensiveness in questioning the patently outdated, ludicrous ________ policy at Hardy." |
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The preoccupation over uniforms at Hardy is the height of silly.
Seriously, people, this is what gets you all worked up and taking your IB selves to privates? If that's it, if that is really it, then I think Hardy must be doing well because that is the most foolish reason ever to turn your nose up at a school. |
The reverse is also true: why get so uptight when people question the need for a uniform? Why not loosen up a little, let the kids wear different colored slacks and jeans if they want? If we can all agree it's not a big deal, then why not make it a kinder, gentler attire policy? |