Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone share their experience with the dress code, especially in middle school? DD has been wearing mostly tank tops all summer, and prefers leggings to jeans when it gets cool. She is tall and almost all shorts are shorter than fingertip length on her except boy-style basketball shorts.
Tax free weekend is coming up and I’m trying to make sure she has a wardrobe that is acceptable to the school without totally overhauling it. Especially after this last year at home it feels like she needs more than she might normally. Adults aren’t the only ones who lived in super comfy slouchy clothes this past year. She cares about fashion so will probably want to mostly wait to see what others wear, but I want to get her through the heat of September without being in violation of dress code enforcers.
In the absence of a legitimate and enforced official dress code, parents should be teaching their kids appropriate attire for the occasion. That means respectable clothing for school, appropriate work clothes according to the work environment, etc. and leaving the revealing (regardless of gender) attire for home. Unfortunately, a lot of parents think shorts that don't quite cover the butt and skirts that stop covering the butt when the person sits or bends over are perfectly fine, along with bare bellies and flip flops. Please don't let her wear anything that, when she looks at her yearbook years from now, she doesn't wonder what the heck she was thinking.
Sure Karen. Time to land your helicopter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone share their experience with the dress code, especially in middle school? DD has been wearing mostly tank tops all summer, and prefers leggings to jeans when it gets cool. She is tall and almost all shorts are shorter than fingertip length on her except boy-style basketball shorts.
Tax free weekend is coming up and I’m trying to make sure she has a wardrobe that is acceptable to the school without totally overhauling it. Especially after this last year at home it feels like she needs more than she might normally. Adults aren’t the only ones who lived in super comfy slouchy clothes this past year. She cares about fashion so will probably want to mostly wait to see what others wear, but I want to get her through the heat of September without being in violation of dress code enforcers.
In the absence of a legitimate and enforced official dress code, parents should be teaching their kids appropriate attire for the occasion. That means respectable clothing for school, appropriate work clothes according to the work environment, etc. and leaving the revealing (regardless of gender) attire for home. Unfortunately, a lot of parents think shorts that don't quite cover the butt and skirts that stop covering the butt when the person sits or bends over are perfectly fine, along with bare bellies and flip flops. Please don't let her wear anything that, when she looks at her yearbook years from now, she doesn't wonder what the heck she was thinking.
Sure Karen. Time to land your helicopter.
+1
Amazing your “regardless of gender” didn’t apply to what you actually wrote. Funny how people think dress codes are sexist...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone share their experience with the dress code, especially in middle school? DD has been wearing mostly tank tops all summer, and prefers leggings to jeans when it gets cool. She is tall and almost all shorts are shorter than fingertip length on her except boy-style basketball shorts.
Tax free weekend is coming up and I’m trying to make sure she has a wardrobe that is acceptable to the school without totally overhauling it. Especially after this last year at home it feels like she needs more than she might normally. Adults aren’t the only ones who lived in super comfy slouchy clothes this past year. She cares about fashion so will probably want to mostly wait to see what others wear, but I want to get her through the heat of September without being in violation of dress code enforcers.
In the absence of a legitimate and enforced official dress code, parents should be teaching their kids appropriate attire for the occasion. That means respectable clothing for school, appropriate work clothes according to the work environment, etc. and leaving the revealing (regardless of gender) attire for home. Unfortunately, a lot of parents think shorts that don't quite cover the butt and skirts that stop covering the butt when the person sits or bends over are perfectly fine, along with bare bellies and flip flops. Please don't let her wear anything that, when she looks at her yearbook years from now, she doesn't wonder what the heck she was thinking.
Sure Karen. Time to land your helicopter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WL teacher - no dress code is ever enforced. nobody wants to step in that hornets' nest. I have seen some VERY revealing shorts/tanks and horrible writing on shirts (a boy at another high school wore a shirt that said "LEGALIZE EATING A** when meeting the superintendent and nobody said a word). nobody says a thing
Isn't that already legal?
LOL
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone share their experience with the dress code, especially in middle school? DD has been wearing mostly tank tops all summer, and prefers leggings to jeans when it gets cool. She is tall and almost all shorts are shorter than fingertip length on her except boy-style basketball shorts.
Tax free weekend is coming up and I’m trying to make sure she has a wardrobe that is acceptable to the school without totally overhauling it. Especially after this last year at home it feels like she needs more than she might normally. Adults aren’t the only ones who lived in super comfy slouchy clothes this past year. She cares about fashion so will probably want to mostly wait to see what others wear, but I want to get her through the heat of September without being in violation of dress code enforcers.
In the absence of a legitimate and enforced official dress code, parents should be teaching their kids appropriate attire for the occasion. That means respectable clothing for school, appropriate work clothes according to the work environment, etc. and leaving the revealing (regardless of gender) attire for home. Unfortunately, a lot of parents think shorts that don't quite cover the butt and skirts that stop covering the butt when the person sits or bends over are perfectly fine, along with bare bellies and flip flops. Please don't let her wear anything that, when she looks at her yearbook years from now, she doesn't wonder what the heck she was thinking.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone share their experience with the dress code, especially in middle school? DD has been wearing mostly tank tops all summer, and prefers leggings to jeans when it gets cool. She is tall and almost all shorts are shorter than fingertip length on her except boy-style basketball shorts.
Tax free weekend is coming up and I’m trying to make sure she has a wardrobe that is acceptable to the school without totally overhauling it. Especially after this last year at home it feels like she needs more than she might normally. Adults aren’t the only ones who lived in super comfy slouchy clothes this past year. She cares about fashion so will probably want to mostly wait to see what others wear, but I want to get her through the heat of September without being in violation of dress code enforcers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:WL teacher - no dress code is ever enforced. nobody wants to step in that hornets' nest. I have seen some VERY revealing shorts/tanks and horrible writing on shirts (a boy at another high school wore a shirt that said "LEGALIZE EATING A** when meeting the superintendent and nobody said a word). nobody says a thing
Isn't that already legal?
Anonymous wrote:WL teacher - no dress code is ever enforced. nobody wants to step in that hornets' nest. I have seen some VERY revealing shorts/tanks and horrible writing on shirts (a boy at another high school wore a shirt that said "LEGALIZE EATING A** when meeting the superintendent and nobody said a word). nobody says a thing