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I'm guess I'm wrong for focusing on the fact that it was such a BAD dye job in the first place....
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Our dresscode went as far as to spesify that your hair had to be all one (natural) color.
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I am sooooo disappointed in this child's parents. :( Life is definitely about picking your battles, and this is the wrong one to pick. Regardless of the school's reasoning for creating the rule, they are 100% in the right to create and enforce it. Anyway that she shakes it, she's going to lose. The rule is not outstide of the boundaries of normal dress codes, most people are not going to be sympathetic to her preference, and she voluntarily chooses to attend this school that happens to have a dress code. I can't see where anyone will support her enough to help her win. I'm sad that her parents would let her walk into such a losing battle. I have to agree w/AlphaFrog that my parents would have definitely nipped that in the bud. While I think that I feared my parents far too much for them to need to do anything more than TELL me to go change my hair color, they certainly would have enjoyed making my life hell if I had pressed the issue.
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According to the video, the school's Code of Conduct only states that hair has to be neat. It did NOT say that hair had to be of a natural colour.
My high school had the same problem 10 years ago, after green and blue hair started appearing. The following year, a "natural hair colour" clause was put in to the student handbook. |
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Basically she wants pink hair, school district prohibits that, so she is sitting in on-campus suspension while her hair is pink. She said in her interview she is willing to fail all her classes during the first grading period to prove her point. |
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Anyway, it's a public school. One of the greatest things about having attended a public school was the diversity that surrounded me every day. It wasn't quite like Degrassi High with spikes and pink hair, but it was pretty close. Lots of kids had piercings in strange places before they were the norm. One boy cut off his eyebrows. Girls were always borderline haute cotoure (sp?)..... and even now where I live, girls are wearing pink, green, purple, even white extensions. I'm proud to live in a place that values those differences. How are people supposed to get used to living in a diverse world if they won't allow kids to BE diverse? And it's stupid to say that coming to school in a bra and panties are the same as having pink hair. It's underwear, you fools. I hope the ACLU gets involved. |
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How about just tell the girl to obey the rules or go somewhere else. I went to a public highschool with 5000 students and I never saw any definace like this. Although the school was in a very nice part of my hometown.....which is already very wealthy (for a town of 100,000) and very conservative to begin with. Didn't see a whole lot of kids like this. At all. |
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I kept reading the posts waiting for anyone to comment. I could understand her fighting if her hair was actually HOT PINK or something. Her hair is hardly pink at all. Lighter than this smiley -> :p It's a gross mess. She should wash her hair and return to class. |
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This may fly in Vancouver, but it certainly won't in most parts of Toronto. |
whaaaaaaaaaa f'in whaaaaaaaaaaaa - so the girl has pink hair - i honestly doubt its REALLY hurting anybody (other than the uptight moral sensibilities of the administration)
as for the job arguement - who says she either needs or wants one - all she wants is to be able to go get her free education like everybody else. at any rate - this school's assinine arguement is the same one used in my hometown for why pregnant girls should be expelled - their appearance was a distraction and it might influence other students to make babies. bull.shit. i've gotta agree with the supporters here - it may be a little thing to stand up for - but at least she has an opinion about something and is willing to take a hit for it. can't really say the same about the rest of this apathetic generation... |
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Most schools in the U.S. have some form of dress code. Are you saying that it's okay for a kid to simply ignore the rules because they want to "self-express"? Schools are for learning. Self expression may be fine in art class, drama, etc., but doing it in ways which intentionally violate school policy is breaking the rules. The issue is not the pink hair -- the issue is that she feels entitled to not obey the rules. Do you think that all school dress codes ought to be optional? |
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When I went through rush, there were two girls with pink hair. One went to Theta, which at OU is considered "top tier" and conservative. The other went to Gamma Phi Beta, which is considered very conservative and middle to top tier. I don't have a clue how many greek girls and boys have piercings, but it seems like a lot. I'd fight it. High school is a time to search and discover who you are, and if pink hair is part of that search so be it. Especially since there is nothing in the dress code about hair color. You can find well paying jobs with any color hair you like. My boss, a vet, has blue hair at the moment. One of my exes is working as a CPA for a wall street trading company with a purple and blue skunk 'do. |
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