Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like the uniform and the way a white shirt looks on my prek3er when he gets to school ... But by the time he gets home he looks like he has been rolling in the gutter! It would be cute if they could all wear madras plaid shirts or something more practical.
White tops seem like a REALLY bad idea. The person who came up with that doesn't have kids and doesn't do laundry. Had to be some recent MBA grad on a consulting gig.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I will never understand why parents don't want uniforms! They are so easy.
Not really. Easy is -- go grab whatever is in your drawer and get dressed for school. Uniforms (in my world) mean -- oh crap, I forgot to move that load to the dryer last night. One more thing to keep track of and worry about.
Anonymous wrote:I will never understand why parents don't want uniforms! They are so easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Percentage of schools is the wrong measure, it should be percentage of students. Deal and Wilson are less than 2% of DCPS schools but over 8% of the students.
The wrong measure for what? What does your post even mean? The story is about the number of schools that do or don't impose a uniform. The decision-making is on a school by school basis, not kid by kid. So the proper measure is number of schools.
Anonymous wrote:I wore a uniform for 12 years. LOVED it. Wish my kids' school had uniforms.
Anonymous wrote:My dd had navy bottoms and white tops since age 4 at two different schools. I am so glad she's now at a non uniform school--and even when we were at uniform schools, I found myself inerpreting that to mean, "something white and blue somewhere on her body," by June.
Everyone brings up brands and class and how uniforms get rid of that. But they dont... unless they are also so strict as to dictate your child's backpack, shoes, and outerwear--in which case, good luck with that. I don't want to send my kid to a school that micromanages my choices and theirs to that extent.
My own childhood: non uniform schools all the way. You know where class snobbery factored in? The quaker school where I went to high school, where everyone had to have guess jeans, tretorns, and those firenze sweaters. Public school on the other hand? We were wearing pajama tops and fifties cocktail dresses. And it was fun.
School uniforms are one of those well-meaning but thoughtless inventions that end up being a source of stress more than they help if you want to dress your kid in white and navy, go for it. If not, whatever. I will say that both public schools my daughter went to didn't really care. There was no penalty for not wearing the uniform. If you have to do it, this is the way to go.
Anonymous wrote:If you think white uniform shirts are a recent invention of a bored MBA, then you missed out on decades of parochial school uniforms dating waaaay back. Not everything, good or bad, was invented in your lifetime.
I did appreciate the Booz comment though.