Anonymous wrote:I don’t think girls or boys should wear booty shorts, midriff baring shirts, strapless tube tops, camis, or saggy pants that show underwear. Nobody should see a bra or thong.
Rules are actually easy to enforce if you bother to enforce them.
How?
Send Sarah Cameron and her booty shorts and bare tummy to the office, call her parents and have them bring her a change of clothes or take her home. If it happens again: suspension.
Then perhaps her parents will actually parent her.
I can’t believe some of what I saw on back to school pictures and at drop off.
They can do the same for masks btw.
^^^
Private schools don’t tolerate nonsense because they set standards and enforce rules. Public schools can, too. They just aren’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently not.
My daughter said a girl in her class had on booty shorts with her thong pulled up high on her hips and a sports bra. Not just a mid-drift showing.
No one said a thing
I don’t say this often but
where are her parents?
Probably going about their business in the belief that what their daughter does is more important than what their daughter wears. Evidently your opinion is different.
That’s what some people use to deflect, but the reality is people judge you by how you look and what you wear even before you have a chance to demonstrate who you are. Plus, women with legit confidence and intellect don’t typically dress inappropriately.
For me, I think our schools have simply lost control. Kids need rules and structure as they develop. It should be easy to set standards and enforce rules, yet our schools seemingly have subpar standards.
If you want to be a person who judges women based on how much skin their clothes expose or don't expose, go right ahead, that's your choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe, but it makes sense, right?
My DD after school the other day;
Mom, some girl wore a shirt and everyone can see her nipples.
Everyone was staring at her. it was hilarious.
is this what parents and schools want?
You worry about the shirts your children wear. Other people can worry about the shirts their children wear. Also, speaking of "where are the parents" - teach your child not to stare at people or laugh at other people's discomfiture, because that's rude and cruel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently not.
My daughter said a girl in her class had on booty shorts with her thong pulled up high on her hips and a sports bra. Not just a mid-drift showing.
No one said a thing
I don’t say this often but
where are her parents?
Probably going about their business in the belief that what their daughter does is more important than what their daughter wears. Evidently your opinion is different.
I get your point, and I have been the target of sexist dress codes due to having an hourglass figure. It’s uncomfortable. However, I don’t think it’s sexist to expect people to maintain some standard of appearance in a professional setting. While the code needn’t be sexist, I don’t think the message that it’s okay to “let it all hang out” is helpful either.
There is no workplace that lets their employees show up any which way. Why should schools be different?
Because students are not professionals and not employees.
Also, MCPS does not allow students to show up "any which way." See the policy posted by a PP.
School is supposed to be a place for learning. It’s not a playground or a dance party. People should dress professionally.
Correct. It's a school. Teachers are professionals, principals are professionals, students are not professionals.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe, but it makes sense, right?
My DD after school the other day;
Mom, some girl wore a shirt and everyone can see her nipples.
Everyone was staring at her. it was hilarious.
is this what parents and schools want?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently not.
My daughter said a girl in her class had on booty shorts with her thong pulled up high on her hips and a sports bra. Not just a mid-drift showing.
No one said a thing
I don’t say this often but
where are her parents?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think girls or boys should wear booty shorts, midriff baring shirts, strapless tube tops, camis, or saggy pants that show underwear. Nobody should see a bra or thong.
Rules are actually easy to enforce if you bother to enforce them.
How?
Send Sarah Cameron and her booty shorts and bare tummy to the office, call her parents and have them bring her a change of clothes or take her home. If it happens again: suspension.
Then perhaps her parents will actually parent her.
I can’t believe some of what I saw on back to school pictures and at drop off.
They can do the same for masks btw.
^^^
Private schools don’t tolerate nonsense because they set standards and enforce rules. Public schools can, too. They just aren’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently not.
My daughter said a girl in her class had on booty shorts with her thong pulled up high on her hips and a sports bra. Not just a mid-drift showing.
No one said a thing
I don’t say this often but
where are her parents?
Probably going about their business in the belief that what their daughter does is more important than what their daughter wears. Evidently your opinion is different.
I get your point, and I have been the target of sexist dress codes due to having an hourglass figure. It’s uncomfortable. However, I don’t think it’s sexist to expect people to maintain some standard of appearance in a professional setting. While the code needn’t be sexist, I don’t think the message that it’s okay to “let it all hang out” is helpful either.
There is no workplace that lets their employees show up any which way. Why should schools be different?
Because students are not professionals and not employees.
Also, MCPS does not allow students to show up "any which way." See the policy posted by a PP.
School is supposed to be a place for learning. It’s not a playground or a dance party. People should dress professionally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently not.
My daughter said a girl in her class had on booty shorts with her thong pulled up high on her hips and a sports bra. Not just a mid-drift showing.
No one said a thing
I don’t say this often but
where are her parents?
Probably going about their business in the belief that what their daughter does is more important than what their daughter wears. Evidently your opinion is different.
I get your point, and I have been the target of sexist dress codes due to having an hourglass figure. It’s uncomfortable. However, I don’t think it’s sexist to expect people to maintain some standard of appearance in a professional setting. While the code needn’t be sexist, I don’t think the message that it’s okay to “let it all hang out” is helpful either.
There is no workplace that lets their employees show up any which way. Why should schools be different?
Because students are not professionals and not employees.
Also, MCPS does not allow students to show up "any which way." See the policy posted by a PP.