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Author Topic: Principals plea: Cover your butts up  (Read 768 times)

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Offline parentsfortruth

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Principals plea: Cover your butts up
« on: November 15, 2012, 10:42:17 AM »
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  • http://www.startribune.com/local/west/179141451.html?refer=y


    Minnetonka principal’s plea: 'Cover your butts up'

        Article by: KELLY SMITH , Star Tribune
        Updated: November 14, 2012 - 9:25 AM

    The principal sent a letter to parents Monday asking them to remind girls to 'keep covered up.'

    Dozens of parents and high schools across the metro endorsed a Minnetonka principal's message Tuesday that discourages teen girls from wearing trendy tight-fitting leggings with increasingly shorter tops.

    Sparking the latest debate over what's appropriate attire in schools, David Adney sent an e-mail to high school parents Monday asking them to talk to their daughters about wearing spandex-like yoga pants or other tight-fitting leggings with T-shirts that expose "more leg and backside" and can "be highly distracting for other students."

    From Forest Lake to St. Paul, more than 70 parents and other high schools called or e-mailed Adney supporting his message, which didn't ban leggings, but urges teens to dress more modestly.

    "It must have touched a nerve," he said, saying the school tries to get ahead of problem trends.

    It's certainly not the first time fashion and high school policies have clashed. In past years, schools have had to deal with spaghetti straps, exposed midriffs and sagging pants. Minnetonka last year cracked down on boys wearing muscle shirts.

    "It's not about trying to be the clothing police, it's just a sensitivity issue," Adney said. "Hopefully with us being the first to speak up, it will create a lot of conversations."

    'Way out of control'

    The e-mail sparked a discussion in the Colwell household in Chanhassen.

    After Traci Colwell saw it, she sat down with her 14-year-old daughter to talk about how to appropriately wear yoga pants to school.

    "I said, 'See, I'm not the only one to feel this way,'" she said. "It's gotten way out of control the way kids dress."

    Like a lot of girls, freshman Carine Colwell wears yoga pants to school two to three times a week because they're comfortable. But some classmates are taking the trend a step further, she said, wearing see-through nylon tights as leggings. Still, the principal's warning upset a lot of students at school Tuesday, she said.

    "Some kids were really mad because they're comfortable," she said. "As long as they're not see-through, they should be allowed."

    Her mother added that it will be a challenge for the school to enforce.

    "It's a tough situation to deal with because that's what the stores are selling, it's in magazines ... that's what kids are wearing and adults are wearing," she said. "You see it all over."

    In the past month, Adney said he's received about a half-dozen complaints from female staff, school volunteers and female students concerned about girls wearing spandex and other tight leggings. In the past, girls wore the leggings with long sweat shirts or jerseys, he said, but the trend of wearing them now with shorter shirts leaves their backside too closely defined.

    "This new trend doesn't seem right, it's troubling," he said. "Cover your butts up -- I'm just going to say it straight up. We're seeing too much."

    Christine Helgeson, whose son attends the high school, was glad to see Adney address it before the fashion trends trickle down to younger kids.

    "They're setting an example for our middle school kids," she said.

    Legality of dress code

    Principals say concerns about fashion trends come up nearly every year -- for boys and girls alike.

    In Richfield, high school Principal Jason Wenschlag said they've had issues this year with girls wearing trendy knit hats, and the school is trying to decide how to enforce against it since boys aren't allowed to wear baseball hats.

    "It's a constant battle," he said about keeping on top of what's appropriate.

    Minnetonka teachers have also had to enforce a no-hat policy among boys this fall, Adney said, following last spring's trend of boys wearing muscle shirts that were too revealing. Before that, it was boys wearing sagging pants.

    A decade ago when he first started as principal, the culprits were low-cut jeans and low-cut one-shoulder shirts on girls.

    Minnetonka's handbook says attire can't disrupt education, be offensive or inappropriate.

    Don Johnson, executive director of the Minnesota Association of Secondary School Principals, said schools are legally allowed to list clothing restrictions in handbooks, which are approved by school boards.

    "Students will always look for something that will be trendy; if it's disruptive to the educational process, it may be banned," Johnson said.

    Minnetonka High School is often the lightning rod, he said. "It's a large high school and with fairly well-to-do students who can afford the latest fashion, and they have high expectations for education."

    Kelly Smith • 612-673-4141 Twitter: @kellystrib

    I think it's disgusting that girls are wearing sheer panty hose type things in school and call those "leggings."  :barf:  I also find it revolting that mostly women are complaining about this. Men are so lily livered and won't speak up. But, I remember my brother speaking up once about girls at a "catholic" school wearing skirts so short you could see their boxers underneath, when he was slapped with a demerit for having his shirt untucked... (yeah, that was against the rules... the absolute horror!) and he was responded to by the 'dean of discipline' "Well, everyone likes to see a little leg sometimes."

    Another good reason you neither send your child to public, nor a novus ordo school.
    Matthew 5:37

    But let your speech be yea, yea: no, no: and that which is over and above these, is of evil.

    My Avatar is Fr. Hector Bolduc. He was a faithful parish priest in De Pere, WI,


    Offline GemmaGal

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    Principals plea: Cover your butts up
    « Reply #1 on: November 15, 2012, 01:18:30 PM »
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  • Its as if the females who dress provocatively crave nothing more than to become someone's sɛҳuąƖ object.

    As I always say: the majority are ALWAYS wrong.

    The majority of magazine and electronic images of women display them in yoga tights or less and those magazines and electronic images expose the women who wear them for what they are: harlots at heart.

    The majority of women I see every day, at church, at work, walking on the streets wear yoga tights, skin tight pants or jeans, as well as wearing low cut tops and show off midriffs and below the waist bare stomachs as well.

    Of  course men are not going to complain, men like to feel their own sɛҳuąƖ power when they look at women dressed provocatively.

    Women need to clean up their acts. If they don't like being thought of as something to be used for sex then they really should stop acting like that's what they value most about themselves expressed by dressing in exaggeratedly sɛҳuąƖ ways which reveal their own sɛҳuąƖ craving and desire for sɛҳuąƖ attention.

    And, please! You ladies who dress like that, dont' start complaining about 'sɛҳuąƖ harassment' and 'rape'!

    You girls and women who dress like harlots instigate the rapes of ALL women, not just the ones who dress provocatively.

    It doesn't take a brain surgeon to understand that when the MAJORITY of women dress like harlots that all women suffer the demoralization of being thought of as sɛҳuąƖ objects who have nothing besides their bodies to offer.

    If you think I may be a little angry at women for what they are doing, you'd be right.
    "A person is an individual substance of a rational nature."
    "Truth does not depend on our knowledge of it; but on the existence of things."
    De Veritate: Ques. X Art. III
    Thomas Aquinas


    Offline Capt McQuigg

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    Principals plea: Cover your butts up
    « Reply #2 on: November 15, 2012, 09:33:49 PM »
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  • None of these cultural trends bodes well...

    Offline ora pro me

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    Principals plea: Cover your butts up
    « Reply #3 on: November 18, 2012, 05:50:49 PM »
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  • I just emailed my encouragement to this principal.    :applause:

    I encourage you to send him a message of support. His email address is:
    david.adney@minnetonka.k12.mn.us