yes totally appropriate
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| As parent I would like teachers to wear those yoga pants. Sexy! |
| Can guarantee that isn't what it looks like... |
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Is this the teacher's normal style of dress or a one-off? For all anyone knows, she was lucky to make it to school that day due to, I don't know, being the ER all night with a sick kid or elderly parent.
That said, I went to Catholic school. The nuns were in full habit, to the ankles, even in K and 1st. They sat on the floor w/o any issues. I'm sure any pair of modern-day stretchy 'work' pants or a skirt would do just fine. |
Habits are notoriously comfortable and unrevealing... also many nuns wear full outfits underneath them so the nun could very well be in yoga pants... |
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Especially since that's AI |
| Remember when women were putting butt pads in their leggings to look like that in real life? That was a wild time 𤣠|
I'm really sorry to the person with their tiny boner posting thirsty (AI) yoga pants pictures, but it looks more like this:
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Thank you for the data-driven and measured response. You sound like a fab teacher! |
| I think it looks and feels nice when students and teachers are properly dressed inside school. Outside school they can choose to dress anyway they want. |
+1 |
You are contributing nothing to this conversation. "Nice" is subjective. And there's different ways to look nice in lots of different clothes. |
And let's be honest, there is a lot of really nice looking athletic wear these days. |
Except it's a very teachable moment. "It" is a vaguely defined pronoun, a terrible basis for a logical statement. "Properly dressed" is obviously subjective in a dozen different ways, with no single consensus definition. Then saying what people can do implies one individual having control and exercising judgment over everyone, which indicates the student needs to work on learning limits and boundaries. Apart from all that, it's just very naive and self-indulgent. |