Most public schools these days enforce a dress code to a degree,however, about 57% of those schools are classified as having a stern dress code. A stern dress code impacts things such as the length of all bottoms and dresses, tank tops, how low cut a student 's shirt can be.Having a stern dress code however isn’t the only problem. A lot of schools are being called out on the amount of sexism in their school dress code. Schools are calling girls a distraction, LGBT students have been prevented from wearing clothes from another gender, and more. In Li Zhou 's article “ The Sexism of School Dress Codes” from the October 20, 2015 of The Atlantic, she uses pathos and an abundance of examples effectively throughout the text to show how the sexism in school dress codes are existent.
The majority of people would assume that having a strict dress code is great. Why? Because the school teachers and staff wouldn 't have to discipline a student every time he or she came to class inappropriately dressed. Having a strict dress code though isn’t so much the problem. More so it 's the extent of sexism that is displayed in schools. Zhou uses an emotional appeal in her article in hopes to
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Sexism in school dress codes don 't stop there. It also continues at outside of school events such as high school dances. Zhou uses Cierra Gregersen homecoming dance as another perfect example. Cierra Gregersen attends Bingham High School in South Jordan, Utah and when she went to her high school homecoming dance the amount of sexism was absurd. School administrators had girls sitting against a wall, touching their toes, and lifting their arms above their head to establish if their dress was appropriate for the dance. Cierra says she remembers girls outside the dance hysterically crying. She also says, “We should not have to be treated like sexual objects because that was what it felt like.” What was suppose to be a fun night for high school students turned into something way worse than