Are Teenagers Hidden Behind Their School Uniforms?

727 Words2 Pages

I want you to take a minute and picture this – you are in a classroom full of thirty, maybe more, children, all are wearing black trousers or skirts and a white shirt accompanied by their schools tie. They’re all sitting at their desks with their notepads and pens in front of them and they all look exactly the same, each and every one of them. They all look like a copy of the other. You can’t tell who the kid is with the 80s music taste, you can’t tell who the kid is that’s extremely good at art. They’re all a blank canvas brought to look like one another all because of the uniform they are being forced to wear. Does this seem right to you? That every single child in the classroom looks exactly like the other one? That they’re being forced to have a certain image just because of the uniform they have to wear? Of course it is not! Each and every one of them is unique and different in many ways so why force them to look the same in a society where standing out from the crowd is one of the hardest things to do and be portrayed as something they are not? Is it truly fair to force each and every one of them to wear the exact same uniform to school making them look exactly like their peer’s? At this teenage age it is believed that the majority of children have ‘found’ themselves and they are comfortable with who they are so why are schools then forcing them to wear uniforms and taking away any sense of being themselves that child had? School’s all across Glasgow claim to let each of their pupils learn in an environment where they are freely able to express themselves but with a uniform in place is this really the case and are they really able to do that? No, they are absolutely not. In this society it means everything to someone to be h...

... middle of paper ...

...ying a separate school uniform for them to wear each day that they are not necessarily comfortable with wearing all the time. Ask yourself this question, is this really going to be saving thousands of family’s money all across Glasgow or costing them more? I think we both know the answer to this one.
I am sure you will agree that school uniforms certainly do not allow pupils to express themselves now. By taking away a pupil’s right of wearing what they want we are taking away the chance to express oneself. It is not fair that a school can have such great power in that matter of basically dictating what a pupil will wear and who they will be for them seven hours in school. Many schools are betraying a person of themselves whilst being there. Would you like to be betrayed of who you are just because of a school uniform you are being forced to wear? I would think not.

More about Are Teenagers Hidden Behind Their School Uniforms?

Open Document