Yep, agree. My kid was in 7th when Covid struck and policy prior was to change, after was not to congregate in the locker room, not to congregate in the unairconditioned gym, and to take attendance 5 x per gym class for fear that the kids would abscond otherwise |
Yup. OP is clearly a troll. |
This must have been school-dependent, because my now-junior didn't have to change (pre-Covid) in 6th, or that first 3/4 of 7th. They were required to be dressed appropriately for the day's activity, but that didn't necessarily have to be different from their school clothes. Jeans were fine, and shoes just had be closed-toe and stay on your feet during the activity. They were assigned a gym locker, so she kept a pair of old sneakers in there in case she wore boots or sandals, and never wore dresses. Most days she just wore her Converse to school and kept them on. I'm not sure what the penalties were for wearing crocs or Ugg-type shoes, but she said there were kids who wore them to PE on occasion. That said, this was a very mixed-income MS, so there may have been concerns about some kids not having the resources to do a full change of clothes every day. |
Private schools need to recruit and this is a good place to do it since many people here are very privileged and have crazy expectations. |
Can't imagine pulling my kid out of public school over PE attire but I guess anything is possible. |
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OP-just wow.
No wonder people are quitting. |
Crazy expectations?! Students are expected to dress out for PE? You’re the problem. |
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Our MS didn’t require kids to change for PE but kids were required to dress in PE appropriate attire (sneakers, certain colors, top and bottom you can move in, etc ). They were advised to bring deodorant. Uniforms were sold if families wanted them in whole or part. I’m fine with this. If you want to change great. If you want to arrive at school for PE and stay that way all day, great.
Purchased the sweatshirt. Sent kid with deodorant, wet wipes or small wash cloth. |