School Uniform

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Blindswordmaster

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Dec 28, 2009
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jaammiie said:
In the Summer heat, I'm really hating my school uniform. Everyday we have to wear and keep on for most of the day, a dark blazer so you can imagine the nasty sweat patches. I hear that in America most schools have no uniform, I rule I would love. It would mean actually being able to keep cool in the heat and not being boiled alive. I hear a lot of arguments for and against having no uniform and was wondering how people are coping with the heat (in London anyway) and what they think about school uniform in general.
I have never had to wear a uniform in school, ever. I wore shorts almost everyday.
 

Redlin5_v1legacy

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Aug 5, 2009
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Hahahaha, I never had to deal with that! I loved that my high school didn't have a uniform.

Now I just love the fact I don't have to go back to that school!
 

Aunel

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May 9, 2008
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rokkolpo said:
Holland here.

and i think it might be against the law to use school uniforms here.
Freedom of Expression for the win!

we Dutch are really for our freedom.
that's right we don't even *bleep* out nasty words on tv. * le gasp*

EDIT: i really don't see any significant benefits from school uniforms.
WOOHOO NEDERLAND!

OT: back in the day, when I still lived abroad, they made me wear school uniforms,

it was horrible, but now I'm able to express myself, by wearing stupid clothes, and my crunchy bass lines of course.
 

MikhailGH

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Jun 11, 2010
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London = heat? Try surviving 40+ :D It doesn't help that we don't have Uniforms, we could run around naked and still be roasted alive :p
 

Foxbat Flyer

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Jul 9, 2009
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As long as we had black pants and grey shirts in junior high school (7-10) then when we went to senior (11-12), aslong as we wore dark blue pants and yellow shirts. this all changed when i was in year 11, juniors had to wear white shirts with the school emblem on it and black pants and seniors wore yellow shirts with emblem on it. None of us seniors got the new uniform though, no point, only 2 years to go at the time...
 

Blemontea

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May 25, 2010
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during 6th and 7th grade i had to wear a uniform but what was nice is that you could wear them any way you wanted and you had different colors for different grades, a little better than standard uniform code but still weird feeling.
 

The Anhk24

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ProfessorLayton said:
Well I'm from America and most schools don't have a uniform... but I really wish they did. Before, I had to wake up every morning and get the same outfit together... I didn't really like it that much at the time, but then the next year I went to a public school and everyone was dressed like idiots. I swear, everyone was sagging their pants or wearing skinny jeans or something equally dumb... I wish we had uniforms.
Dude trust me I've seen private schools, the ghetto wannabes will make those uniforms look just as dumb...u know cutting holes in the pants, getting it either too big or small etc
 

Shivarage

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Apr 9, 2010
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Jamieson 90 said:
AndyFromMonday said:
Jamieson 90 said:
Not all schools use a pass system
They should.


Jamieson 90 said:
and even if they do security staff are humans, the guard could call in sick a replacement could be sourced who isn't aware of the policy
Are you honestly telling me that the replacement can't be briefed? "Hey man, kids need to have this pass in order to enter." Is it really so hard to do so?

Jamieson 90 said:
The person at the office could be busy and miss something, these things happen.
And these things could happen either way an uniform was present or not.


Jamieson 90 said:
How can you say apperance is not a factor in bullying? Its one of the main factors, bullies target people that don't fit in or are different. If your clothing is not as good as the rest of the kids because your family can't afford better then its going to show.
"Not as good as the rest of the kids"? What's that supposed to mean? Do you honestly believe kids are so insane that they will instantly check to see if the clothes you're wearing are from fucking GAP or not? It's all about behavior.

Jamieson 90 said:
already said it doesn't solve the problem but it helps, the uniform goes someone to making everyone look similar instead of Group A wearing expensive designer cloths and group B wearing second hand clothes from the charity shop.
Designer clothes? What about the middle class? The kid who isn't rich but neither poor? Is he going to be bullied as well because he doesn't wear "designer clothes"? And who the hell wears designer clothes to school?

If a family is so poor that they can't even afford clothes and must receive them from charity(and to be honest, it's not about the brand but about how clean they are) then how the hell are they going to maintain an uniform giving that they wouldn't posses the money to buy a washing machine?

Jamieson 90 said:
I Already said if a kid doesn't want to work they wont but for some kids it helps them get into the routine, read things properly.
You're making wild assumptions here. How does an uniform help kids get into their "routine"?


El Poncho said:
There is more ways into the school other than the front door, they could sneak round the back/side climbing the fence and get their friends from the inside to let them in the school. Once they are in the school grounds they can be identified.

Yeah, and is it really a bad thing that children who are not part of the school enter the grounds?


El Poncho said:
People could get bullied for wearing the same clothes because they can't afford more clothes. They could get bullied by other kids because of what they are wearing.(yes it's stupid but kids are cruel).
In my 12 years of school I have seen NO ONE being beaten for what they were wearing. EVERY SINGLE KID came to school dressed with the same pants for a few days and a different Shirt/Sweater. I don't understand why certain people have this obsession that if a kid dares not come dressed differently everyday he will be centered by the class and bullied to fucking oblivion. I could only hear this argument from parents who either never went to school or worry to much.





El Poncho said:
You wear those clothes when you are learning in school, so when you put those clothes on you know you are going into learn and not screw around. It gets you into the working mindset.
How does an uniform make you "know" you're going to learn and not fool around and how exactly does it put you into that "mindset"? Do you honestly believe an uniform has the magical ability to transform everyone into hard working pupils the moment they put it?
You are obviously very set against this, As in most debates I see no way of changing your opinion so im not going to bother, my point was it helps but you obviously don't see it that way, I was using my experience as a teacher which I think should count for something but hey what do I know.
The majority of teachers i knew were very stupid and only knew what their books tell them, even when the books were very wrong... being a teacher doesn't actually mean that much, one of my mates is dyslexic and he failed a year because the teacher he repeatedly asked to get him the help that he needed did not bother
 

Jamieson 90

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Shivarage said:
The majority of teachers i knew were very stupid and only knew what their books tell them, even when the books were very wrong... being a teacher doesn't actually mean that much, one of my mates is dyslexic and he failed a year because the teacher he repeatedly asked to get him the help that he needed did not bother
I'm sorry to hear about your friend, I' am actually dyslexic myself although I also have a mild form of Dyspraxia as well as Mires Irlen syndrome. I to find that there was little help was offered to kids with problems when I was at school. I don't know how old you are but as a teacher now I can tell you that things have greatly improved, well at least where I work in my experience.

Actually being dyslexic myself helps me to spot kids that I think may have it and once they are diagnosed I find I can provide tips to ease the pressure and act as a role model and a form of inspiration.

You will also find that teachers have to go through more training these days to ensure they are qualified, in fact the bare minimum is a Degree and an A level in the chosen field. That is only speaking globally, I'm sure there are some very clever teachers out there that understand their subject yet are crap at getting kids to understand the main concepts etc.

As a teacher I'm not saying I know everything, because we are all humans and make mistakes, but my experience should count for something when debating an issue related to education in the same way you would listen to a doctor on a health issue etc.
 

Vrach

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Jun 17, 2010
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Any compulsory arbitrary rule can go to hell as far as I'm concerned, people (and people are still people even before the age of 18) have a right to live their lives the way they want to as long as it doesn't directly negatively impact someone else's. That's of course just my 2 cents :)
 

Serge A. Storms

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Oct 7, 2009
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I grew up learning that one of the best and most important parts of "freedom of speech" was that everyone had it, and individuals weren't forced to express themselves like everyone else. The "price" was that you might not always like what other people say, but it's protected as long as it's not intruding on other people. That extends to how we present ourselves in public, and school's usually where we start to learn how to present ourselves on a daily basis. When the debate came up (and in a public school in North Atlanta, it was more of a token debate topic, at least while I was in school), I couldn't help but feel like uniforms were a superficial answer to a lot of deeper sociological issues. I also came to the conclusion that I didn't like people that ***** about how other people hung their pants too low or wore offensive t-shirts, and I ended up feeling like it was poetic justice that the judgemental little shits ended up being the only people to "suffer" from not having school uniforms.
 

AWDMANOUT

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Jan 4, 2010
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I live in Texas, where we have "regulated dress". We just have to wear certain things, but not specifically a uniform. A lot of people complain about it, but I don't see the big deal...
 

Shivarage

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Apr 9, 2010
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No worries, I'm 21 and now realize that all those years of hard work in school have done nothing for me

I tried for 3 months to get a job to only find letters of "not enough experience"

I have been working voluntary in a charity shop for 4 months now in the hopes that it will help me get a job, I just don't get a reply anymore

Each week i hear about people with no qualifications and no experience getting jobs and wondering wtf...

Edit: I have four gcse's BCCD and a national diploma equivalent to 2 A's and a C at A-level in performing arts (The difficulty of this topic is very underestimated)
 

smurf_you

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Jun 1, 2010
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El Poncho said:
rokkolpo said:
EDIT: i really don't see any significant benefits from school uniforms.
My schools reasons are:

If someone from the outside has entered the school they can tell them apart.

Kids are less likely to be bullied about their clothes.

It shows you are ready to work.
See we still got bullied about our cause some people had to get theirs second hand, so its not that the clothes were different, it was just now they got to make fun of people who were to poor to get new ones. Also only half of my school had to wear the uniform. The sports and dance kids didn't have to cause the principal was afraid that if he enforced it, most of the parents would pull their kids out of the school..... *sighs*
 

octafish

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Apr 23, 2010
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El Poncho said:
rokkolpo said:
EDIT: i really don't see any significant benefits from school uniforms.
My schools reasons are:

If someone from the outside has entered the school they can tell them apart.

Kids are less likely to be bullied about their clothes.

It shows you are ready to work.
It can keep parental cost down too. You buy two of everything and that is it. Done for a few years. Maybe new socks every now and then.

I aprove of school uniforms, however at the schools I went to you didn't have to wear a blazer at all, I never owned one. Never wore long pants either.