Dressing down the dress code
Deirdre Newman
School board trustee Wendy Leece is fed up with what she sees as
students’ persistent flouting of the dress code and is inviting the
community to let the full board know how they feel about it on
Monday.
Leece says she will welcome community comments during the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District board’s study session, which
also will include discussing refinements to the district’s
zero-tolerance policy -- which spells out misconduct that is eligible
for suspension or expulsion.
The district has a dress code that prohibits spaghetti straps,
low-cut tops and specifies how wide baggy pants may be.
But Leece says it’s not being taken seriously.
“We really have to come up with some creative consequences for
those who break the dress code,” Leece said. “For now, it’s just a
joke.”
Leece was inspired to bring the dress-code issue to the board for
review after three Newport Harbor High School students successfully
crusaded against logos they believed represent fascism and Nazism,
causing one local company to pull its logo. She said the board may
also discuss teachers’ attire because she has heard comments in the
past that a dress-code policy should be set for teachers as well.
Leece has campaigned against the district’s zero-tolerance policy
before, last when board members added bullying to the rules, arguing
that it infringed on students’ freedom of speech. She also has fought
to have the Ten Commandments placed in classrooms.
Although the study session is more of an informal get-together and
no final decisions will be made, Leece said the community’s input is
valuable nonetheless.
“We’ll be happy to listen to some fresh ideas,” Leece said. “I
think if kids aren’t dressing properly, it does interfere with the
educational process and decorum in the classroom.”
While Leece often is alone on issues, in this case trustee David
Brooks echoed her concern.
I’m sure that there are things that need to be done [with the
policy],” Brooks said. “First and foremost, we want our students to
be able to be in an environment they can learn in.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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