So don't wear a dress like that, and don't allow your daughters (if you have any) to wear dresses like that. There, done. |
How is this any different than the Hs girls wearing shorts that are so short their butt cheeks are visible? I bet the dress covers more. |
I have a feeling the issue isn't about elegance, more about students wearing attire that is too revealing. |
Yup. Not a dress, therefore no pre-clearance required. Good job, PP! |
I believe it was phrased that way to allow for that possiblity. Would still need to be approved as appropriate, which I assume would mean that it would have to fit and look like it was intended, and not like a joke. |
Doesn't that kind of expose the utter absurdity of the rule, if school administrators have to sit there and look at photos and pass judgment on whether a dress-up dress on a high school boy fits as intended? Or maybe there is money in the budget for the homecoming dance to pay a local drag queen to offer opinions? |
I don't know about you, but I find the idea of the school principal (or whoever) inspecting photos of my teenage daughter for exposed skin to be kind of skeevy. Not to mention a waste of public money. |
You're preaching to the choir. I'm still not sure why people think it's ok, or empowering even, to encourage young women (or men, but that seems like far less of a problem) to expose their private parts in public. |
But it's fine if she wears the dress so that the whole world can see her exposed skin? lol |
it's not any different. None of it should be allowed. |
Apparently, skanky-ness is the new female empowerment. |
People who have a say in this: 1. Her parents 2. Her People who don't have a say in this: 1. School administrators 2. You 3. Lots of other people |
Please note the difference between "why are school principals passing judgment on the length of girls' skirts?" and "girls, wear really short skirts, yay!" |
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Ho coming. That's why a dress code exists. Don't like it, don't go.
This is not something new. The schools had to take action because a few don't excuse me WON'T do rules. |
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I'm pro-dress codes in schools, as in the rules that prohibit booty shorts and skimpy tank tops etc. I think policing prom attire is silly. The difference is the purpose of the kids' presence - one is learning, the other is a party.
I'm also a parent of boys, and a wild-eyed feminist, who is routinely horrified by the skimpy stuff that young girls and women wear. Still, I don't think it merits administrative oversight at events outside school. If female students want to look like prostitutes at prom, that's their choice. |