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  1. #1
    Join Date
    27th January 11
    Location
    Matlock, Derbyshire, UK
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    Kilts appreciated in the heat.

    The neighbour of my sister-in-law, who lives on England's south coast, said that the local news reported that the boys, in the following news article, who donned school skirts when shorts were banned, said they fully appreciated the attraction of wearing a kilt after their experience.
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...S-instead.html

    I wonder if the word will spread?
    If you are going to do it, do it in a kilt!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    28th May 13
    Location
    Calgary, Alberta, Canada
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    Unfortunate skirts are not kilts and they should have been sent home, or more appropriately the rules should have been relaxed to accommodate the weather.
    "Good judgement comes from experience, and experience
    well, that comes from poor judgement."
    A. A. Milne

  3. The Following User Says 'Aye' to Liam For This Useful Post:


  4. #3
    Join Date
    2nd July 08
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    Quote Originally Posted by Liam View Post
    Unfortunate skirts are not kilts and they should have been sent home, or more appropriately the rules should have been relaxed to accommodate the weather.
    As a matter of the rules, you are quite wrong. The UK Dept of Education lays down that, whatever uniform rules a school sets, they must allow a pupil of one gender to wear any garment permitted in the rules for the other gender.

    Of course, that policy was set so that schools could not ban girls from wearing trousers, but it follows as night follows day that a boy wearing a skirt that falls within the rules for a girl, i.e. hemline, fabric colour, etc., is permitted to do so by a national rule that the school itself is powerless to override. So, no, the school had no right to send them home, neither any power to do so.

    Some schools that have had battles over girl's hemlines, have however decreed that both genders must wear trousers at all times, which is not against the DOE rules.

    OTOH, if, say a boy showed up in a men's kilt that was longer than the range for girl's hemlines, or tartan, when most UK schools specify grey or navy blue, they could send him home. That may not be what you would expect, but I'm told that's how it is.

  5. #4
    Join Date
    18th July 07
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    Just to be pedantic, it should be pointed out that there is no UK Department of Education - there are English, Scottish etc. departments of education.
    Alan

  6. The Following User Says 'Aye' to neloon For This Useful Post:


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