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Sep. 25—Higley Unified School District now has a new student dress policy that some may see as allowing more risqué attire then the previous one. The Governing Board last week approved the ...
LGBT rights organizations have advised against mandatory gender-based dress codes. According to the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), "If an employer has a dress code, it should modify it to avoid gender stereotypes and enforce it consistently." The HRC lists policies requiring women to wear skirts or men to wear pants as an example of a dress code ...
Madera Unified’s policy restricts students from wearing any piercings “that create a safety issue.” Under Clovis Unified’s dress code, students are allowed to wear piercings “in ears ...
Illustration that Johnston County Public Schools sent to families explaining the new student dress code for the 2023-24 school year.
The dress code in primary and secondary grades for boys comprises dark blue, khaki, or black shorts with a white open-collar short-sleeved shirt, white ankle socks or long dark socks, and brown or black trainers. Female students, wear a knee-length dark blue or black skirt, and a pale white blouse with a loosely hanging bow tie.
Galena Park Independent School District is a school district based in the Channelview CDP of unincorporated Harris County, Texas, United States.. The district serves the city of Galena Park, about half of the city of Jacinto City, small portions of the city of Houston (including Fidelity and portions of the Northshore area), and unincorporated areas in Harris County (including the CDP of ...
"The dress code treats boys unfairly by presuming they cannot control themselves around girls," says one expert. "And it perpetuates the very damaging idea that risqué clothing is responsible for ...
Detroit Public Schools created a district-wide uniform dress code for students effective on May 11, 2006, for all students in grades Kindergarten through 12. [60] This includes mandatory identification badges. Parents may opt their children out of the dress code for medical, religious, or financial reasons. [61]