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Dress codes: Where should schools set limits?

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They’re called leggings — popular fashion items that are tight-fitting pants to some, and glorified tights to others.

Younger girls often wear them with little fuss. But as those same girls approach middle school, leggings have become increasingly controversial, often a target of school dress codes.

Some schools have banned leggings outright. Others have set limits. Haven Middle School in Evanston, Ill., just north of Chicago, took what turned out to be a contentious stand: If you wear leggings, you need to have a shirt or skirt over them that reaches at least down to your fingertips.

In other words, girls need to cover their behinds.

It might seem a reasonable request at a time when school dress codes — and even uniforms — are common and often supported by teachers and administrators who frequently complain about students who push the limits of taste, and the parents who let them (and may even push those limits themselves).

But how far is too far? And do schools sometimes go too far in pushing back?

Judges have tended to side with schools when safety is a concern. For example, a federal court agreed with a school district in Morgan Hill, Calif., after some high school students were told not to wear American flag T-shirts on the Mexican holiday of Cinco de Mayo in 2010. The worry was that the shirts would incite conflict with the school’s many Hispanic students.

When safety isn’t at issue, says Perry Zirkel, a professor of education and law at Lehigh University in Pennsylvania, the courts tend to throw the cases back to the schools and parents, so they can come up with solutions together.

It’s not always easy, since people have different notions of what’s appropriate and what’s not.

At Haven Middle School, there has been a lot of confusion. Just a few weeks ago, the school’s own website said leggings were banned, when apparently they were not, school officials now say. Then there was the matter of yoga pants, which are tight like leggings, but flared at the bottom. Did the fingertip rule also apply to those types of pants, especially when no one could tell the difference if they were tucked into boots?

The discussions at school meetings have sometimes bordered on silly. But few disagree that there are serious issues at hand — among them, whether girls are being shamed and embarrassed at a time when they already feel more aware of their changing bodies.

Clearly frustrated with the debate, Haven Middle School teachers posted this statement on the school’s website to explain the reasoning behind the leggings policy: “We believe, through years of experience and professionalism, that it is essential to our school’s climate that we set a standard of expectation and decorum.”

They denied that they acted because leggings distract boys, as has been alleged by some parents.

“The notion that girls’ clothing affects the way boys learn is not, and never will be, our message,” the statement said.

However, parents who’ve attended school meetings, and students who dislike the policy, seem most troubled by an inconsistency in enforcement. They claim that some girls are “dress-coded” more than others, perhaps because they are more physically developed.

“I’ve also seen skinny, smaller girls walking around in leggings every week and never, ever getting caught for it,” says Kate Green, a seventh-grader at Haven who concedes that she probably fits that category herself. She’s had warnings, she said, but never more than that, when other girls have had to put their gym shorts over their outfits.

Parents Kevin and Juliet Bond wrote an open letter to the district after their 13-year-old daughter Lilly sensed unfairness and asked them to address it.

“It’s not like these girls are dressing up like street corner gals, right? I mean, it’s sweatshirts and comfy pants,” says Juliet Bond, an author and professor of women’s studies at a Chicago liberal arts college.

There are those who argue that the best way to handle the dilemma is to mandate uniforms.

“It puts everyone on the same playing field when they’re at school,” says Kitty Rotella, principal of St. Mark’s Episcopal School, a private school for preschool through eighth grade in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. When her students have the occasional out-of-uniform day, she says, she feels they’re more distracted, even if there’s no attire she deems inappropriate.

But others question the value of any strict codes.

“We were always pro dress code. Now I think, ‘Is it really that important?’ ” says Jamie Renfro. She’s the mother of a third-grader Kamryn Renfro, who recently gained national attention when she decided to shave her head to support her friend Delaney Clements, who has cancer and lost her hair after chemotherapy.

After she shaved her head, 9-year-old Kamryn was suspended from her public charter school in Grand Junction, Colo. — though the school’s board quickly reversed the decision.

Now, because of her daughter’s experience, Renfro says she catches herself paying attention at school events to dress code violations — earrings that might be too big, or a boy’s hair that is longer than shoulder length.

“But does the length of the kids’ hair necessarily affect them in the classroom?” she asks. “I really doubt it does.”


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