Attention: Please take a moment to consider our terms and conditions before posting.

School Uniforms / Formal Wear

13

Comments

  • seth plum said:
    seth plum said:
    It is ironic that the law requires (for the most part) people to send their children to school.
    So in year six parents are required to list six preferences of secondary school, hoping for the first choice, dreading having to accept the sixth choice.
    So if you have a scenario where the rules oblige you to ‘send’ your children to a school you and your child don’t want to go to, simply refuse to follow the school uniform, hair, make up and other rules and see what the local authority does then.
    You can just deregister?
    Then the issue is where the child goes to school,
    The sixth choice school or nowhere/online/home schooling.

    Not ideal, but I'm saying you don't have to send them if you're not happy with the choice.  You're not obliged to as you said.
    I think you are right.
    The sixth choice or nothing.
    Online or home schooling being the only other options, which would come with other issues undoubtedly.
  • Was also at Eltham green from ‘81 and the reversible PE tops they made us get were horrendous. Basically reversible as there was a white band on the inside so you could get put on a green team or white banded team.
    When it rained it was like wearing a lead weighted rucksack on your shoulders.
    They must’ve relaxed the rules while I was there as remember any white or green top was allowed when I outgrew mine.
    I remember that poxy shirt. 
    Like a really thick reversible rugby shirt. 
    Thats exactly what our was for ! Red or red n white.
  • seth plum said:
    seth plum said:
    It is ironic that the law requires (for the most part) people to send their children to school.
    So in year six parents are required to list six preferences of secondary school, hoping for the first choice, dreading having to accept the sixth choice.
    So if you have a scenario where the rules oblige you to ‘send’ your children to a school you and your child don’t want to go to, simply refuse to follow the school uniform, hair, make up and other rules and see what the local authority does then.
    So you advocate rebellion because you don’t get your first choice ?

    Strange line of logic linking these separate aspects. 
    Is it that strange for parents to not be slung into their sixth choice?
    Seems to me in those circumstances rebellion is a kind of logic.

    No not common I suggest and therefore ‘strange’ to use your term. 

    Very unfortunate and frustrating and unjust if  it happens yes. 

    And no the rebellion will not logically  change the allocation.  
  • seth plum said:
    92,000 home schooled reportedly.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cg3382380vko
    Sadly I think a huge proportion of that is going to be kids with additional needs that the Local Authority haven't supported the child.

    https://www.probonoeconomics.com/news/councils-wasted-60mn-on-court-disputes-over-children-with-special-educational-needs-report-finds#:~:text=PBE's research found that local,60mn to the public purse.

    We're very very close to deregistering our youngest for that very reason.
  • MrOneLung said:
    and as for the workplace, I have been working in banking/financial services since 1988 and ties were phased out from around late 90's and not worn a suit for a good 20 years
    Dad worked in head office from early 70's to early 90's, hence was not a 'customer facing' manager. He was required to wear a suit and tie right through hot summers, whereas the female staff were allowed dresses. 
  • Having a school uniform is fine. 

    The correct colour shirt/jumper should be sufficient and 'school badge' uniforms should be banned. Creates a monopoly of the market unless you sell the uniform at cost. 
  • seth plum said:
    92,000 home schooled reportedly.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cg3382380vko
    Sadly I think a huge proportion of that is going to be kids with additional needs that the Local Authority haven't supported the child.

    https://www.probonoeconomics.com/news/councils-wasted-60mn-on-court-disputes-over-children-with-special-educational-needs-report-finds#:~:text=PBE's research found that local,60mn to the public purse.

    We're very very close to deregistering our youngest for that very reason.
    This and religious reasons are the two reasons I've most seen for children being 'home-schooled'. 

    Also parents that had a poor journey through education and therefore have a low opinion of schools and teachers themselves. 
  • lot's of jobs will be lost from the school uniform shops  and embroiders if this get's pushed through, in the past it was so everyone looked the same and you couldn't tell the wealth side of families apart. Times have changed I suppose but this will have a wider impact.
    You could always tell though... 
    Exactly.  The 'couldn't tell the rich kids from the poor ones' is a failed reason for uniforms.
  • Sponsored links:


  • What convinced me that it was a scam was when my son's school changed the uniform rules with things like pupils needed trousers with the school logo on them etc... There were a number of changes that were all about limiting who could supply them and were clearly there to raise money. I appreciate the idea that having a school uniform can be a good thing where school isn't a fashion parade and poorer kids are not shamed but surely this has to be around generic uniforms, obtainable cheaply from any shop.
  • seth plum said:
    Rizzo said:
    seth plum said:
    It is ironic that the law requires (for the most part) people to send their children to school.
    So in year six parents are required to list six preferences of secondary school, hoping for the first choice, dreading having to accept the sixth choice.
    So if you have a scenario where the rules oblige you to ‘send’ your children to a school you and your child don’t want to go to, simply refuse to follow the school uniform, hair, make up and other rules and see what the local authority does then.
    So you advocate rebellion because you don’t get your first choice ?

    Strange line of logic linking these separate aspects. 
    I can kind of see where he's coming from. We were fortunate that our son got his first choice secondary school. If he'd got his sixth choice, I am genuinely not sure what we would have done as there is no way in hell I was sending him to that dumpster fire of a 'school'. 
    Quite. But not wearing the required uniform is untelated. You won’t get your preference because you make your child stand out as a rebel. Available spaces is horribly complex and a lottery but a place won’t appear through non adherence to uniform elsewhere. 
    Rizzo said:
    seth plum said:
    It is ironic that the law requires (for the most part) people to send their children to school.
    So in year six parents are required to list six preferences of secondary school, hoping for the first choice, dreading having to accept the sixth choice.
    So if you have a scenario where the rules oblige you to ‘send’ your children to a school you and your child don’t want to go to, simply refuse to follow the school uniform, hair, make up and other rules and see what the local authority does then.
    So you advocate rebellion because you don’t get your first choice ?

    Strange line of logic linking these separate aspects. 
    I can kind of see where he's coming from. We were fortunate that our son got his first choice secondary school. If he'd got his sixth choice, I am genuinely not sure what we would have done as there is no way in hell I was sending him to that dumpster fire of a 'school'. 
    Quite. But not wearing the required uniform is untelated. You won’t get your preference because you make your child stand out as a rebel. Available spaces is horribly complex and a lottery but a place won’t appear through non adherence to uniform elsewhere. 
    I agree about the complexity. I am however interested in what schools do if an allocated child never wears the school uniform.
    Should the school expel the child?
    At the school 2 of my grandchildren attend.
    Darrick Wood  secondary. 
    If they turn up without the proper uniform they will get a detention. 
    If this continues I would  ( as their primary carer) ,be told to attend the school for a meeting. 
    There's not a chance the school would change its stance as its very strict when it comes to uniforms being worn.
    So I would imagine that if I refused the kids would probably be excluded and possibly expelled. 
    As it's a very good school it's not a hill I'm prepared to die on.
    My boy went to Darrick Wood. Terrible uniform, something of a seventies throw back. Brown trousers, brown blazer and an awful yellow shirt that looked washed out with brown tie to match. When he went into sixth form it was business suits, (as the school described it), for both boys and girls. There were things I didn't like about that school but the uniform at least made them all equally fashion disasters.
    It is a good school if your child leans toward being academic or at least it was when my son went there. I do remember a few of my sons friends being boffed off to Bromley college age 14 to do "more vocational subjects." which thankfully didn't happen to my son. NIce school though, the kids tend to be good mannered and well behaved. I live about 100 yards from it and have never even heard any of them swear let alone some of the horrible stuff elsewhere.
  • In darkest Bedfordshire in the late 70s/early 80s we had to have a blazer with the school badge sewn on. Any blazer would do, as long as the badge was on it. White or pastel coloured shirt, grey or black strides and jumper, black shoes or boots - DMs were fine - and a school tie. Games kit was also one of those heavy reversible rugby jerseys - blue one side, blue with a yellow hoop the other. So the only things you were obliged to buy from the monopoly retailer were the games shirt, a tie and a badge. Not so bad really.        
  • In darkest Bedfordshire in the late 70s/early 80s we had to have a blazer with the school badge sewn on. Any blazer would do, as long as the badge was on it. White or pastel coloured shirt, grey or black strides and jumper, black shoes or boots - DMs were fine - and a school tie. Games kit was also one of those heavy reversible rugby jerseys - blue one side, blue with a yellow hoop the other. So the only things you were obliged to buy from the monopoly retailer were the games shirt, a tie and a badge. Not so bad really.        

    Pretty much the same here in the late 60s/early 70s - black blazer with badge sewn on, black or grey trousers, white or grey shirt, black or grey jumper,black shoes and a school tie (which could be dispensed with if it was hot). Sixth form was a lounge suit, collar and different school tie. Badges and ties from Freebody's in Thomas Street, the rest from anywhere. Sixth form prefects policed it but to be honest there was pretty much 100% adherence.
  • It's not a scam. It's about pride, identity, discipline.

    Head teachers in state schools are perhaps the least likely cohort to be part of a scam that punishes working class parents at the expense of manufacturers and retailers.

    The cost of schoolwear, when amortised over its lifespan, is likely to be the best value item of clothing a parent can buy their child, and it comes with the added benefit of ensuring that there is a degree of equality between pupils, irrespective of their background.

    In many cases, parents moaning about the cost are the ones that actually dislike authority (just see the angry faces in the papers at the start of every schoolyear because their precious daughter got sent home for having pink hair and wearing black trainers in defiance of the school rules that every other parent and pupil abides by), and don't blink an eye when putting the latest North Face puffa jacket on Klarna. 

    Every school has a fund in place to support parents that may be in financial hardship, and most schools have a PTA/ equivalent that will organise sales of second hand (good condition) uniform.

    Most schools have a decent balance between generic wear that can be bought in the high street, and school specific items that are part of their identity.

    Many other countries operate equivalent principles around uniform, and other countries don't have them at all - there are historic and cultural reasons behind that, but in the UK they are part of our culture that brings a real benefit to kids of school age. 
    sorry, but the bit in bold is a load of bollox.
    my kids shirts last about 6 months before they grow out of them, and blazers need replacing each year as kids grow

    I would say these badged/logoed items amortized over their lifespan are the worst value
  • Kenny Cunningham used to live next door to Darrick Wood.
  • School uniforms are about control and supplication.
    Some people think they are a good thing to have.
    I have yet to see anything that explains how a uniform can help the teaching and learning dynamic.
    Does wearing a purple blazer mean you would be better able to understand and solve quadratic equations, or be able to play the piano, or know how oxbow lakes are formed, or how to construct a reasoned argument, or problem solve?
    It seems to me the fuss over uniforms actually gets in the way of teaching and learning if only because of the resources used in enforcing uniform regulations.
    Mind you, there may be an argument out there that explains how wearing a uniform helps an individual student to learn. I am open to hearing it.
  • Sponsored links:


  • edited January 9
    MrOneLung said:
    It's not a scam. It's about pride, identity, discipline.

    Head teachers in state schools are perhaps the least likely cohort to be part of a scam that punishes working class parents at the expense of manufacturers and retailers.

    The cost of schoolwear, when amortised over its lifespan, is likely to be the best value item of clothing a parent can buy their child, and it comes with the added benefit of ensuring that there is a degree of equality between pupils, irrespective of their background.

    In many cases, parents moaning about the cost are the ones that actually dislike authority (just see the angry faces in the papers at the start of every schoolyear because their precious daughter got sent home for having pink hair and wearing black trainers in defiance of the school rules that every other parent and pupil abides by), and don't blink an eye when putting the latest North Face puffa jacket on Klarna. 

    Every school has a fund in place to support parents that may be in financial hardship, and most schools have a PTA/ equivalent that will organise sales of second hand (good condition) uniform.

    Most schools have a decent balance between generic wear that can be bought in the high street, and school specific items that are part of their identity.

    Many other countries operate equivalent principles around uniform, and other countries don't have them at all - there are historic and cultural reasons behind that, but in the UK they are part of our culture that brings a real benefit to kids of school age. 
    sorry, but the bit in bold is a load of bollox.
    my kids shirts last about 6 months before they grow out of them, and blazers need replacing each year as kids grow

    I would say these badged/logoed items amortized over their lifespan are the worst value
    You'll notice the use of "likely"...so if its not true for you, then I accept that.

    Shirts - I'd guess 90% of schools have plain white / blue (no logo's). A pack of 3 boys shirts from M&S is priced between £10 and £19. So worst-case, assuming you can wear the same shirt twice a week for 6 months and you paid £19, is 13p per wear. I'd suggest that most shirts have a lifespan of more than 6 months, and you can get lower priced versions. 

    Blazer - My kids blazer, costs between £35 and £44 according to size. Its worn 5 days a week and has a lifespan of at least a year (190 days). At worst case scenario that's 23p a day. 

    Much cheaper and a lot less angst than my other kid who is at 6th form and spends a disproportionate amount of my money on clothes to wear relative to the cost of a uniform.
  • Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Germany are reportedly four of the five highest achieving school systems, the United Kingdom being the other, but not in the top three. Denmark is at the top.
    There is no requirement for school uniforms in Denmark, Finland, Sweden or Germany.
    Would those systems in those countries be even more successful if the students had to wear uniforms?
    America in general does well in terms of educational measurements yet from what I can tell they don’t have uniforms over there.

  • Germany couldn't find a supplier for their uniforms.

    Hitler Youth jacket with insignia and armband
  • seth plum said:
    Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Germany are reportedly four of the five highest achieving school systems, the United Kingdom being the other, but not in the top three. Denmark is at the top.
    There is no requirement for school uniforms in Denmark, Finland, Sweden or Germany.
    Would those systems in those countries be even more successful if the students had to wear uniforms?
    America in general does well in terms of educational measurements yet from what I can tell they don’t have uniforms over there.

    I think the European  populations, not really including us, have a different mind set on many things probably formed by recent past where wearing uniforms may be looked upon as being as a little alarming. Where as in this country its more traditional and we don't attach a uniform to belong to anything other than a particular school. 
  • Something that seemed disproportionately important as a kid, I was always pleased to be one of the kids whose blazer had a fart flap, not a shit slit.
  • It's not a scam. It's about pride, identity, discipline.

    Head teachers in state schools are perhaps the least likely cohort to be part of a scam that punishes working class parents for the benefit of manufacturers and retailers.

    The cost of schoolwear, when amortised over its lifespan, is likely to be the best value item of clothing a parent can buy their child, and it comes with the added benefit of ensuring that there is a degree of equality between pupils, irrespective of their background.

    Every school has a fund in place to support parents that may be in financial hardship, and most schools have a PTA/ equivalent that will organise sales of second hand (good condition) uniform.

    Most schools have a decent balance between generic wear that can be bought in the high street, and school specific items that are part of their identity.

    Many other countries operate equivalent principles around uniform, and other countries don't have them at all - there are historic and cultural reasons behind that, but in the UK they are part of our culture that brings a real benefit to kids of school age. 
    Nothing wrong with a school wanting a uniform and school identity. Where it’s a scam is when the children must wear a eg. A certain tartan skirt which can only be bought from a specific supplier. When the jumpers or sweatshirts have to have the school logo embroidered, also from a specific supplier. A school bag with logo. It’s bollocks and ridiculously expensive and unnecessary. My granddaughters schools “colour” is royal blue. No specific requirements for logos or to wear a blazer with badge. White blouse and grey or black skirt or trousers. All can be bought relatively cheaply in any high street supermarket. It fits all the requirements for a school to achieve identity, children’s dress equality and is generally affordable. Anything else over and above is completely unnecessary. In contrast, her first school uniform required a tartan skirt which was specific to that school and for the year one size was £40. Don’t tell me that’s not exploitative and ridiculous.
    I don't believe it is either. The school has the choice of uniform and expected standards, the parent has a choice of school. 
  • Parents who are allocated the sixth ‘choice’ on a list of six do not have a choice of school.
    As has been pointed out above, people either have to take what the Local Authority decides or have no school at all.
  • It's not a scam. It's about pride, identity, discipline.

    Head teachers in state schools are perhaps the least likely cohort to be part of a scam that punishes working class parents for the benefit of manufacturers and retailers.

    The cost of schoolwear, when amortised over its lifespan, is likely to be the best value item of clothing a parent can buy their child, and it comes with the added benefit of ensuring that there is a degree of equality between pupils, irrespective of their background.

    Every school has a fund in place to support parents that may be in financial hardship, and most schools have a PTA/ equivalent that will organise sales of second hand (good condition) uniform.

    Most schools have a decent balance between generic wear that can be bought in the high street, and school specific items that are part of their identity.

    Many other countries operate equivalent principles around uniform, and other countries don't have them at all - there are historic and cultural reasons behind that, but in the UK they are part of our culture that brings a real benefit to kids of school age. 
    Nothing wrong with a school wanting a uniform and school identity. Where it’s a scam is when the children must wear a eg. A certain tartan skirt which can only be bought from a specific supplier. When the jumpers or sweatshirts have to have the school logo embroidered, also from a specific supplier. A school bag with logo. It’s bollocks and ridiculously expensive and unnecessary. My granddaughters schools “colour” is royal blue. No specific requirements for logos or to wear a blazer with badge. White blouse and grey or black skirt or trousers. All can be bought relatively cheaply in any high street supermarket. It fits all the requirements for a school to achieve identity, children’s dress equality and is generally affordable. Anything else over and above is completely unnecessary. In contrast, her first school uniform required a tartan skirt which was specific to that school and for the year one size was £40. Don’t tell me that’s not exploitative and ridiculous.
    I don't believe it is either. The school has the choice of uniform and expected standards, the parent has a choice of school. 
    What planet are you on. Parents do not in many cases have choice of school.
Sign In or Register to comment.

Roland Out Forever!