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Clovis dress code policy stirs up controversy

Clovis+dress+code+policy+stirs+up+controversy

CUSD students protest for gender neutral code

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[/media-credit] Students are beginning to protest against the CUSD dress code, which does not accommodate gender neutral standards.

For several weeks, a legal fight has taken place within the Fresno County pertaining to the dress code conducted in the Clovis Unified School District. Acts of protest from students at Buchanan, as well as throughout Clovis, demand for change regarding its controversial, decades-old dress code.

According to Clovis dress code, skirts or dresses, earrings and long hair are forbidden amongst male students. Across the county, students have protested by dressing in clothing of the opposite gender. Students claim that the dress code hinders the creativity and expression of students. Clothes are simply the outer layer, but they aren’t necessarily gender-exclusive, students argue.

A senior at Buchanan High School, Wyatt Browning, shares that dress code restrictions go beyond just professionalism but inhibit creativity within a student.

I think this goes beyond worrying about appearing professional, and into the realm of personal preference,” Browning said. “There are countless professionals with facial hair, and many with long hair, as well. Some of the top companies, like Google and Apple, have no dress code, and allow employees to dress and groom themselves as they please, because this leads to a higher morale, which leads to increased productivity. However, many students aren’t even worried about gender equality, but rather just want to grow out their hair.”

On Jan. 27, 2016, Clovis Unified trustees voted 4-3 against updating the policy. Since the vote, trustees have denied education to students through its unlawful dress code. A letter from the ACLU (American Civil Liberties Union) to the Clovis Board in August of 2015 acknowledges an agreement between the two that revisions would be made by the second semester.

Junior at Clovis North, Madison Devereaux, believes that the dress code sets a standard for greatness in terms of preparing high school students to be adults.

“The dress code hasn’t interfered with my style and I don’t really mind the dress code,” Devereaux said. “I think that it is a respectable dress code because it it teaching us how we should dress in the real world. Having a strict dress code is manageable, although I can see how for some people it is perceived as unfair.”

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The Clovis board refuses to to make changes to the dress code to make it gender neutral. The dress code was created in 1975, and despite the state laws and recommendations, the district has fought to keep the dress code the same. In previous years, a similar controversy also took place over the same issue. In 1994, students filed a lawsuit concerning a similar issue, and, again, the district won.

Some parents complain, saying that Clovis dress code stresses students and takes focus off of school work. While several students have been caught out of dress code, their time out of class ticks as they are forced to change clothes. Other parents disagree with the students and say that the dress code should stay, arguing that it is directly tied to the district’s success in other areas.

Last summer, a senior at Buchanan, William Pleasant, was denied enrollment due to his length of his hair, which reached past his earlobes. Pleasant has received multiple detentions and was sent to Saturday school (a four hour detention) due to breaking dress code with his hair. He was even threatened to not be allowed to take his end-of-the-year finals during his junior year.

Pleasant states that the district has achieved excellence but still lacks fervor in changing its dress code.

The Enforcer resize
[/media-credit] Many students and faculty have varying views on the proposed changes, stirring controversy on Clovis campuses.

“CUSD, a district that has time and time again shown its commitment to excellence, would maintain a dress code policy that forces students to conform to an outdated model for dress while hindering creativity and denying personal expression at the detriment to students is perplexing to say the least,” Pleasant said. “If people at the district would venture as far as to take survey of student’s approval of the dress code, the results would quantify the discontent student feel towards the dress code.”

At the beginning of senior year he was denied enrollment. During that time he decided to reach out to the ACLU. After the treatment he received due to his hair, the wrote a Letter to the Editor to the Fresno Bee about the dress code.

Recently, the Clovis board decided to reconsider its vote on its strict dress code due to the conflict with the state law protecting gender expression, so the discussion continues. 

This writer can be reached via Twitter: @jennypenny8835 and via Email: Jenny King.

For more news, read BRIEF: Cheer performs at second competition, Feb. 6.

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  • B

    BrooklynnFeb 28, 2016 at 9:24 pm

    Interesting article, good job Jenny!

    Reply
  • A

    Ali CowanFeb 23, 2016 at 11:16 am

    I would like to wear a tank top and shorts on a hot day. If it distracts a boy, maybe they’re the ones who need to be lectured

    Reply
  • A

    Anthony DiazFeb 22, 2016 at 1:49 pm

    I personally feel that the dress code should be tweaked a tad. I mean I understand the meaning behind a bunch of the dress code ,to keep students looking respectable and decent. At the same time I think they should relax things like guys and long hair or the thing against ripped or “shredded ” jeans. Not only including things like gym shorts,band names,and brand of some sort. Me personally, I like wearing my ripped kneed jeans and growing my hair out pretty decently long. Also wearing a shirt that I got dress coded for, which is nothing more than a harmless Beatles shirt. This is just who I am though so ya…chill Plz XD

    Reply
  • J

    Joshua SavageFeb 22, 2016 at 1:48 pm

    This was a well-written article. I’m not quite sure where I stand with this whole argument. I mean, it would be nice to have everyone well-dressed, cleaned up, looking nice, but that’s just not realistic. We teach the children of today to not judge a book by it’s cover, but I am seeing it today, now, in clovis schools. If everyone wore the same uniforms, and all had perfect hair, then there would be no uniqueness. Again, I’m not quite sure where I stand. Thanks for writing this article!

    Reply
  • J

    Jacob A.Feb 22, 2016 at 1:44 pm

    Great article. I do think it is time for there to be an update to school dress codes.

    Reply
  • R

    Reese BrownFeb 22, 2016 at 1:39 pm

    This made me so mad. So what there saying is we shouldn’t dress how God made us to we should dress like the woman (if your a man) or dress like a man (if your a woman).

    Reply
  • K

    KristinaFeb 22, 2016 at 11:13 am

    Very interesting!

    Reply