Florida yearbook altered photos to cover more of high school girls' chests - CNN
I came across this story about a school in Florida editing the yearbook images of some of the students, apparently because they failed to meet the dress code.
I guess they felt they didn't meet the dress code.
The superintendent said that yearbook coordinator made the decision but that there was insufficient review. So, are they going to appoint a committee? No wonder our schools are so messed up.
It's funny, because when I was in high school (late 70s/early 80s), I don't recall that there even was a dress code. There probably was something about it in the school rules, but it never came up as an issue. Most students just wore t-shirt and jeans. The school had other problems, but worrying about what students were wearing was not one of them.
I think dress codes started to get stricter in the late 80s/early 90s, when much of the 1970s era permissiveness was coming to an end.
But have they gotten too strict these days?
I came across this story about a school in Florida editing the yearbook images of some of the students, apparently because they failed to meet the dress code.
(CNN)Flipping open a yearbook for the first time is normally a moment full of excitement -- but at one Florida high school, some students were left in shock after seeing that their yearbook portraits had been edited.
When Bartram Trail High School freshman Riley O'Keefe saw her yearbook photo, she noticed a black bar was added to cover more of her breasts.
"I couldn't believe that they printed the yearbook looking like that," O'Keefe, 15, told CNN. "And then I started to flip through the yearbook and saw more and more girls with their chest edited."
She texted her mother a photo of it on Wednesday from the school in St. Johns, Florida.
"I know she's worn (the outfit) in school hundreds of times because it's like her go-to outfit," her mother Stephanie Fabre told CNN on Monday, saying she believes the outfit had met the district's dress code. The dress code states that girls' tops "must cover the entire shoulder and they must be modest and not revealing or distracting."
There were 80 photos of female students that were altered in the yearbook this year, the district's Chief of Community Relations Christina Langston told CNN on Monday.
I guess they felt they didn't meet the dress code.
"It is disappointing to be addressing the student picture situation in the Bartram Trail High School Yearbook," St. Johns County School District Superintendent Tim Forson said in a statement to CNN. "Certainly, there has never been an intent to embarrass or shame any student for the clothes that they wear. Unfortunately, we are learning a valuable lesson in the importance of process and understanding that the intent is not always the result."
The high school's website has a disclaimer saying that if student portraits in the yearbook did not match the district's student code of conduct, they may be "digitally adjusted."
"The yearbook coordinator made the decision to edit the photos based on her assessment that the females were not in dress code," Langston said in an email to CNN.
The superintendent said there was an insufficient review before the school decided to edit some of the students' images. He called the staff member involved an "outstanding educator" and said there will be changes in how the content is considered in yearbooks to come.
The superintendent said that yearbook coordinator made the decision but that there was insufficient review. So, are they going to appoint a committee? No wonder our schools are so messed up.
The student dress code prohibits clothing that is "immodest, revealing, or distracting," according to the district's code of conduct. However, each school's principal has the "final authority" over whether a student's dress is appropriate, the code says.
The anger over the edited yearbook photos is part of a larger issue, said Fabre. It's the district's dress code that needs to be revisited for its inequity with how it treats what girls wear, as opposed to boys, the student's parent said.
"It comes on the heels of a much bigger issue of gender discrimination and these girls being targeted and sexualized for being told that their clothes are wrong," she said. "There's inequality within their dress code."
In the section about all students, the dress code says "students are prohibited from wearing clothing that exposes underwear or that exposes body parts in an indecent or vulgar manner."
Under the "All Students" section, it says, "Tank tops and shirts are not acceptable except in physical education classes."
The girls' section says girls cannot wear skirts that are shorter than four inches from the top of the knee. It also says, "Revealing clothing, pajamas and lingerie are not acceptable. Underwear must not be exposed. Hair curlers and excessive make-up shall not be permitted."
While the dress code for girls and boys each have three entries, the list of rules for boys is shorter. The rules for boys include "boy's pants/slacks must be worn at the waist. No boxer shorts or underwear may be visible. Mustaches and beards shall be neatly trimmed." Pajamas and revealing clothing are not permitted.
The district dress code also prohibits attire that displays "profanity, violence, discriminatory messages, sexually suggestive phrases, advertisements, phrases or symbols of alcohol, tobacco or drugs."
It's funny, because when I was in high school (late 70s/early 80s), I don't recall that there even was a dress code. There probably was something about it in the school rules, but it never came up as an issue. Most students just wore t-shirt and jeans. The school had other problems, but worrying about what students were wearing was not one of them.
I think dress codes started to get stricter in the late 80s/early 90s, when much of the 1970s era permissiveness was coming to an end.
But have they gotten too strict these days?