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They are so cute!!
LD
LD
Lady Day said:They are so cute!!
LD
Miss_Bella_Hell said:First, it does NOT eliminate label snobbery. Have you never seen a uniformed 12 year old girl with Prada Sport shoes on?
Viola said:How is it more economical? My parents didn't buy me new button down shirts or pants/skirts or dress shoes every year.
Who cares about what-to-wear-everyday hassle? I don't get that. Either you enjoy the picking out an outfit, or you throw your chosen neutral pants at whatever shirt's clean, right?
It doesn't eliminate competition among any uniform-clad girls I've ever known. It just becomes what hair things, what jewelry, what phone, what shoes you have. I guess it might stymie boys though, I don't know. But I suspect not, I've known a lot of boy shoe-snobs under the age of 17, and many jewelry guys as well.
Marc Chevalier said:I didn't explain myself well enough. In Chile, you have to wear a specific type of black leather lace-up shoe with your school uniform. There are designated shoemakers that manufacture it. Believe me, none of them are Prada.
It's more economical because there are fewer clothes you need to buy, and the styles don't change.
Mothers who have to dress multiple kids for school each day appreciate the lack of "what to wear" hassle.
In Chile, girls and boys are not allowed to wear flashy jewelry, flashy makeup and fancy/odd hairdos in school.
LizzieMaine said:I don't remember ever being really conscious that clothing even *had* brand names when I was in school -- the only label you ever saw in public was the ankle patch on some kid's sneakers, but even that didn't carry any kind of cachet: most everybody I knew bought their clothes at Sears, Grants, or a local store called Epstein's, and nobody ever went around with tags hanging off. In that kind of environment, uniforms would have been rather pointless.
lol that is funny.so that the children wish to rebel and wear three-piece suites!
Couldn't anyone last a couple of hours without any snacks? If it was excruciatingly hot and everyone was in danger of dehydration, I would understand bottled water. Snacking during a ceremony to honor you, no.JJWord said:...Halfway through the ordeal I was handing snacks out to classmates around me.
LaMedicine said:A commencement ceremony is to honor the graduating student's achievement after all, both individually and collectively, and so a very special moment. Hmm (insert deep in thought smilely here)....so I do suppose it is up to the honorees to make the best or the worst of it, manner-wise and otherwise.
HadleyH said:A bit off topic..
For me it was School = Uniform
I always wore uniform, i can't remember one day that i went to school without uniform.[huh]
My favorite was the one i wore in primary school, it was a light gray pinafore with dark red tie and a dark red jumper, also a thin red belt!
LaMedicine said:Couldn't anyone last a couple of hours without any snacks? If it was excruciatingly hot and everyone was in danger of dehydration, I would understand bottled water. Snacking during a ceremony to honor you, no.
A commencement ceremony is to honor the graduating student's achievement after all, both individually and collectively, and so a very special moment. Hmm (insert deep in thought smilely here)....so I do suppose it is up to the honorees to make the best or the worst of it, manner-wise and otherwise.
Paisley said::eusa_clap
When my classmates were graduating, I was in basic military training school. Need I say that I wasn't munching on snacks during parades and other ceremonies?