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Educationally Appropriate Dress and Appearance/Dress Expectations
The responsibility for the dress and appearance of a student rests primarily with the student and his/her parents or guardians. In the interest of maintaining a safe and healthy learning environment, the district believes in the following basic principles:All students are encouraged to dress in a manner that is appropriate, comfortable and conducive to an active academic school day.
Students should be able to wear clothing without fear of or actual unnecessary discipline or body-shaming.The student dress code should serve to support all students to develop a body-positive self-image.
The district standard dress and appearance policy is gender-neutral and applies to all students equally regardless of gender on school campuses and at school-sponsored functions and will be enforced consistently and fairly by all members of the school staff.Examples of inappropriate clothing include:
clothing where the buttocks or torso is exposed, i.e., tube tops, half shirts, halters
clothing that is see-through. (clothing must be opaque)
clothing or accessories that show profanity, obscene words or pictures, sexually suggestive statements, violence, or incitement to violence
clothing representing gang-related activities
clothing where the entire thigh is exposed, such as micro minis or short shorts.
bathing suits or cut-offs
the wearing and carrying of tobacco promotional items, or items promoting controlled substances (drugs) and/or alcohol
clothing where undergarments are exposed
clothing that has text or visual images that is libelous, bullying, constitutes harassment or discrimination
footwear must be worn at school and all functions no backless or open-toed footwearAdditionally, site leadership (UCC subcommittee plus one parent) with a survey from parents, may establish a site-specific dress code addendum in the following circumstances:
Times when students are engaged in extracurricular or other special school activities and where the standard dress and appearance policy would not be appropriate for the activity.
Times when students are engaged in specific courses where modification is needed to ensure the safety of the students engaged in the class. Examples include lab sciences, physical education, CTE classes or other classes that contain potential hazards.
Schools may set up their own site-specific addendums relating to hats, caps and other head coverings. There shall be no restriction on student head coverings worn for bona fide religious purposes.
Each school site, in accordance with the District Dress Code Review Process (as directed by the Dress Code Committee, which meets once a semester) may develop additional guidelines stricter than the district's minimum standard dress and appearance policy; however, these site-specific dress code addendums may not contradict the district’s dress and appearance policy outlined in this document. Schools are responsible for following the identified district policies on notification of students and parents for their site-specific addendums.
Consequences of Dress and Appearance Code Violations
Dress and appearance code violations will have consequences that are applied consistently and equitably. Except under exigent circumstances, suspension or expulsion will not be used as a consequence for the violation of a dress code.Staff shall provide students with an opportunity to remedy the violation. Opportunities to remediate may include, but are not limited to, parental contact, offer of exchange of clothing, referral to the Student Support Team (SST), or to the Say Yes Coordinator. Any discipline that shall arise out of dress code violations shall have minimal loss of instructional time as its goal.
First Violation: Administrator, or designee (not a CTU member), can make a parent/guardian call. Students will be offered the opportunity to remedy the situation, which could include an exchange of clothing, if available, turning a shirt inside out, or other potential remedy. Verbal warning given.
Second Violation: Administrator, or designee (not a CTU member), will make a parent/guardian call. Students will be offered the opportunity to remedy the situation, which could include an exchange of clothing, if available, turning a shirt inside out, or other potential remedy. Written warning given.
Subsequent Violation(s): Administrator, or designee (not a CTU member), will make a parent/guardian call. Students will be offered the opportunity to remedy the situation, which could include an exchange of clothing, if available, turning a shirt inside out, or other potential remedy. A parent conference will be scheduled. Detention can be considered as a consequence.
If a parent/guardian or student disagrees with the site administrator's decision on a standard violation, the parent/guardian or student should attempt to resolve the problem by requesting a personal conference with the site administrator. If the problem cannot be resolved informally to the parent/ guardian’s or student's satisfaction, the site administrator's decision may be appealed to the CEO’s designee, whose decision shall be final.
Dangerous or Disruptive Violations: Dress or appearance violations that cause actual disruption of the educational environment, result in actual violation of law or other school rules, including hate-crime laws, or cause actual injury may result, at the discretion of the district Administration, in more serious disciplinary action, up to and including expulsion without regard to the policy set forth above for standard violations. The process for appealing these dangerous or disruptive violations shall be consistent with standard district disciplinary procedures.
Exception to Regulations
Generally, these neutral dress rules will be applied to all students without regard to personal circumstances. However, religious beliefs, medical requirements or other reasons may be grounds for an exception to a specific portion of the district Standard Dress & Appearance policy with specific advance approval from the district. A petition for an exemption from enforcement of a specified portion of the district Standard Dress & Appearance policy may be submitted to the principal. Under no circumstances will the principal allow an exception for dress that displays gang symbols, uses profanity, displays products or slogans that promote tobacco, alcohol, drugs or sex, materially interferes with school work, materially disrupts the school environment, substantially disrupts the school environment or creates a risk of safety.Gang-Related Apparel
Gang-related apparel is not acceptable. If individual schools that have a dress code prohibiting gang-related apparel at school or school activities, the principal, staff and parents/guardians participating in the development of the school safety plan shall define "gang-related apparel" and shall limit this definition to apparel that reasonably could be determined to threaten the health and safety of the school environment if it were worn or displayed on a school campus.Principals will collaborate with Law Enforcement Agencies to update changes in gang-related apparel at the beginning of each semester or as often as needed. Because gang-related symbols are constantly changing, definitions of gang-related apparel should be reviewed at least once each semester and updated whenever related information is received.
Uniforms
In schools where a school-wide uniform is required, the principal, staff, and parents/guardians of the individual school shall jointly select the specific uniform and uniform combinations to be worn.The principal or designee shall give parents/guardians at least two weeks’ notice before a school uniform policy is implemented.
Parents/guardians shall be informed of their right to have their child exempted from a school uniform policy. A student exempted from participation in a school uniform policy by his/her parents/guardians must comply with this regulation and any supplemental site-specific dress code adopted at the site level.
The CEO or designee shall establish criteria for determining student eligibility for financial assistance when purchasing uniforms.
The CEO or designee shall establish a method for recycling or exchanging uniforms as students outgrow them.
Students who participate in a nationally recognized youth organization should be allowed to wear uniforms on days when the organization has a scheduled meeting.