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Sheffield: Girl, 13, was sent home from school due to her leopard-print hair
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/...1614792179.jpg
You are one hell of a rebal are these kids the new Punk Rockers? Lauren Mcdowell, 13, showing the haircut she was sent home for, at Forge Valley School in Stannington, Sheffield Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/arti...#ixzz3l3hJ2JTW http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/...1614853144.jpg Mother your "Human rights " angle is Bollocks Its a Fecking Rule break |
Looks like they have run out of shampoo in her house, get your hair washed love. :idc:
Grim looking pair. |
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She could comb it over the mess |
I see her mother's setting that child (because that's what she is) up for a fall in later life. And yes... let's all send them some shampoo.
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Is this really news? So the school doesn't like your leopard print hair. Of course they don't. :laugh: Change it and move on, you can't run to the Daily Mail every time something doesn't go your way. Usually these articles feature people with haircuts a bit more subtle than this...
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Yes its news because they are Not Moving On |
I love jessie j
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Good, that's some tragic hair if I've ever seen it
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Wrong Thread Nothing to do with this Story |
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What kind of mother would think it ok for her 13 year old daughter to go to school like that? It's not even a nice hairstyle.
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Eurgh, what a hideous hairstyle.
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A Trouble Maker |
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They look so happy
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Parents who show no respect for school rule and then they wonder why their little darlings have no respect. Follow the rules and little darling won't need to be sent home
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It looks like she has ringworm
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http://www.ringworm-treatment.net/wp...m-Pictures.jpg ringworm |
'She didn't sign away her rights when she started at school.'
...no but she signed a home/school agreement, agreeing to adhere to uniform/hair policy ..and then broke that agreement by choosing this hairstyle... |
i love actual news
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is2g in all daily mail articles like this theres always the people looking sad or unimpressed with their arms crossed
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I don't get why schools enforce haircut rules tbh
Surely sending her home is really disruptive to learning whereas a haircut is not :shrug: |
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To Stop Evil Gangs |
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Its against the Rules Thats what matters |
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Individual freedom |
It's not a hairdo to have for school but if you can't have silly hair when you're a teen when can you? :/
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Bollocks She is Under Age |
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when i was at school i got pulled out of my lessons on many occasions due to having ear piercings up my ears. it was ridiculous to make me miss out lessons because of some tiny things in my ears that you couldn't even see when my hair was down. |
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In the West, we enjoy GREAT "Individual Freedom". From waking to retiring, I go about my business and live my life without the Police, Security Services or any other 'Official Bodies' detaining me, stopping me or questioning me. I am free to do ANYTHING I want to do - why I can even hang upside down naked in my bedroom and watch Maggie Thatcher speeches whilst whipping my bare backside with a vaseline covered kipper if I want to. Among a myriad things I CANNOT do, is shout and bawl in a Public Library, play for my local football club whilst naked, or enter most restaurants and nightclubs in a dirty vest, underpants and training shoes. Why? Because ALL these organisations have rules, rules which have been devised for specific and very relevant reasons, whether we can discern such reasons or not (though the reason for most rules are logically apparent) and if I or any other person want to be a member of such organisations, then we will be required to adhere to those rules. Schools are organisations, and despite some of the inane views on here, 'uniformity' and 'conformity' within a school, are NOT indications of some sinister 'Government Program' to surreptitiously turn our children into 'mindless' State-Controlled 'Stepford Citizens', but rather a time-honoured method of instilling discipline and self-pride in them. Death is the 'Great Leveller', but there are numerous 'Great Levellers' in life, and Snow is one of them. The shabbiest 'poor man's' garden looks no better or worse than the 'rich man's rolling manicured acres under a foot of snow, and School uniforms and other obligatory 'appearance' codes are other 'Great Levellers', because they make it more difficult to differentiate between poorer children and their wealthier counterparts. Something such as the (ludicrous) hairstyle in the OP may seem trivial to some, but it is not. The child is receiving a FREE education - probably the greatest gift she will ever receive - and conformity to the rules of the organisation is NO price to pay for enjoying the benefits of 'membership'. It is her inadequate and stupid parents to blame because they are displaying crass arrogance in defying the school rules. Where does relaxing the perfectly sensible rules end? with rich kids turning up for school in Dolce and Gabbana D & G, clutching Prada or Louis Vuitton bags in lieu of satchels, and sporting Patek Phillipe watches? Parents such as the mother in the Op's photo would be the very FIRST to complain about such 'inequality' if the above was the case. I believe that all the schools I know of are generous in their tolerance of pupils 'individuality' to a degree, but schools are seats of learning NOT nightclubs or fashion shows and if parents desire their children to 'stand out', then studying hard in school and achieving the highest grades possible is the correct way to achieve this. For those who still whinge about our 'Individual Freedom' within the UK, then with apologies to JFK and his; "Lass’ sie nach Berlin kommen” speech, I say "Let them come to North Korea, Saudi Arabia, or Syria", or anyone of a hundred other countries. |
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I'm with Kirk on the uniform bit being there to make children more equal in their clothing. I went to a private grammar school (on a scholarship) and my biggest dread of the year was non uniform day., so much do that I would often not attend that day. Being very aware of the lack of designer labels in my wardrobe against the other girls was, for a teenage girl, the ultimate embarrassment. I also got in trouble for piercings which I had to cover with plasters...all annoying but it was very much one rule for all thankfully. I'm not sure about hairstyles though....I was ginger so always stood out in a crowd anyway :fist:
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Conformists will love it naturally, using earrings and hair as a tool for self expression has been attempted by teens in every generation it's nothing new... doesn't mean you're a chav or thick.
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You say conformist I say self concious teenager :shrug:
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Her mother should be more concerned about her education than her stupid hairdo. If it's a school rule not to have outrageous hair - and it is pretty outrageous for a 13 year old child - presumably both the child and her mother are too stupid to understand the rules. Or maybe they're on some kind of crusade which is going to take up time meant for studying. Hopefully she can sort herself out, on with her education and get a job at the end of it and not end up a non-conformist "individual" living off the taxpayer... most of whom confirm to employers' rules and save their individualism for their own time.
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Is that not the goal of conformists and nonconformists alike that they will succeed?
What is the point of these stories I wonder, are they to discourage any form of rebellion by routinely humiliating those who don't toe the line? |
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