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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsParents, students asking Webster Groves School District to let girls wear crop tops
WEBSTER GROVES, Mo. (KMOV.com) -- Parents and students are asking Webster Groves School District to let girls wear crop top shirts. The group wants a change and the district says no and are pushing back on claims of sexist rules.
My daughters' abdomen is not a distraction, you need to look away, said parent Jennifer Grotpeter.
Grotpeter is the mother of two daughters, a junior and senior in the district. She believes the schools dress code is biased toward young girls, specially the guidelines for shirts that showcase the stomach aka crop tops.
For years, we've been fighting an unequitable dress code in Webster Groves, said Grotpeter.
https://www.kmov.com/news/parents-students-asking-webster-groves-school-district-to-let-girls-wear-crop-tops/article_bdd60fd8-0784-11ec-b90d-8be2e6ad4b4d.html?fbclid=IwAR1gKHpx0RFrhRPiKuK1RHlkrIzOR0KBIC5zBwvFqUN7xuOIFjZ9UorMmqU
My 2 cents: Let them wear it. From the link they barely show the stomach at all.
sprinkleeninow
(20,133 posts)sprinkleeninow
(20,133 posts)Polybius
(15,235 posts)I don't understand.
sprinkleeninow
(20,133 posts)obamanut2012
(25,906 posts)JFC.
sprinkleeninow
(20,133 posts)Ms. Toad
(33,915 posts)It was at a Pride event on a very hot day - so the crop tops were likely shorter - but breasts can hang out both at the top and the bottom, and some are designed for that purpose. (Do an image search on "underboob"
sprinkleeninow
(20,133 posts)Ms. Toad
(33,915 posts)based on what I've seen in the last 24 hours.
Response to Polybius (Original post)
sprinkleeninow This message was self-deleted by its author.
Jilly_in_VA
(9,852 posts)is a "mid-drift shirt"? Proofreaders, PLEASE!
And all you phony religious folks...Jesus said, "If your right eye offends you, pluck it out." He was speaking metaphorically, but what he meant was, stop looking, dumbazz. Muhammad also said, don't stare at women, doofus. They're all pretty well united, and men have got it wrong, blaming it all on the women. They need to pay attention to their own nasty minds.
And apparently the new definition of "crop top" is "if it shows even a teeny bit of skin when you raise your arms over your head." So somebody has time to go around policing THAT? JFC, what a waste of time. Meanwhile, is our children learning? I guess not. Their administrators isn't.
elleng
(130,126 posts)Wingus Dingus
(8,049 posts)Why are parents making a stink FOR this? Fucking weird. Send your kids, male and female, in appropriate clothing.
Me.
(35,454 posts)SouthernLiberal
(407 posts)When I was in high school, many years ago, the students had an argument about the dress code. It started in mid winter, when several girls who walked to school wore pants. This was against the dress code, and they were sent home to change. Several lost the whole day, because they had no other choice but to walk to school wearing a skirt in below freezing weather. Others got a ride from parents. The next day, every single girl wore pants to school.
There were other conflicts about what girls could wear to school.
Come spring, the principal agreed at last to discuss the dress code with a group of students. It was, of course, all about what girls could wear. It was the same excuse that people use today - boys would be distracted by the clothing that girls wore. Some of what the principal said (like the ban on midi-skirts, which were popular at the time) lead me to believe that the principal was the one who was distracted by our clothing.
I think that is still the case.
LisaL
(44,962 posts)are concerned about crop tops?
gulliver
(13,142 posts)"Furry" parents might want their kids to go to school dressed like animal characters. Where does the line get drawn?
This is why we have democracy and school boards and school administrators. If a parent doesn't like a dress code rule they have a way to express it. They can vote. If their way gets voted down, then that's that.
Arkansas Granny
(31,483 posts)zeusdogmom
(978 posts)Designated color bottom in pants or skirt, and a designated color polo shirt with a choice of long or shirt sleeves. Done! Makes life much simpler. And less expensive. Private schools have done this for eons. And in the last 20 years or so, some public schools. Ditto charter schools. My grandchildren wear school uniforms to a public charter school - makes mornings much easier. (blue polo shirt and black bottoms with a school t-shirt on Friday) Kids can express themselves in other ways.
Ms. Toad
(33,915 posts)But if I was drafting a dress code, school appropriate attire would include the top meeting the pants in a way that doesn't expose the belly or the butt crack.
I don't know about that particular school's dress code - but that requirement can be written in a way that is gender neutral.
Here's the equivalent of what I was seeing yesterday running around at a Pride festival:
https://i2-prod.dailystar.co.uk/incoming/article15243521.ece/ALTERNATES/s615b/0_underboob-fashion-1297712
crickets
(25,896 posts)It's absolutely possible to write a rule about this in a way that addresses both sexes. Boys can let their pants fall down and girls can let their boobs hang out of their crop tops all they like after school.
hunter
(38,264 posts)Boys could wear shorts, but any boy who did got called "faggot" or worse.
Girls might wear shorts and tube tops but there were certain male teachers well known for making inappropriate comments, or even hitting on, girls who did.
And streaking...
I quit high school for college, which was one of the better decisions I've made in my life. I was allowed to attend graduation with the class ahead of mine however because my grandma had cancer and she wanted to see at least one of her grandchildren graduate. My grandma liked the pomp and circumstance. It was really awkward for me, since it was mostly people I didn't know except for a couple of other misfits in my own class, and older siblings of classmates. I didn't want to go.
There was a rule that everyone had to wear appropriate clothing beneath their caps and gowns because there had been a scandal the previous year with kids wearing swim suits, some of them quite skimpy.
Boys passed inspection with a simple glance, all that was required was for the trouser legs above their shoes to be visible. Girls were required to open their graduation robes.
My children suffered uniforms kindergarten through high school. It's largely an issue about gangs here so the majority of parents support strict dress codes. Economic factors may also play a large part.
I grew up in an affluent 99% white city. High school kids were intensely aware of "designer" clothes. My parents would buy our clothes at Sears on credit at the beginning of every school year.