Jump to content

Girl Banned From School Because of Her Hair Color


sugarplum892

Recommended Posts

Girl Banned From School Because of Her Hair Color
British teen Emily Reay has been barred from her school until she tones down her hair to a more “natural” hue. (Photo: Louise Porter/Cater News Agency)
Seventeen-year-old Emily Reay is seeing red after she says that her school announced that she isn’t welcome back until she dyes her flame-colored hair a more “natural” hue. 
“I was very angry at first,” the naturally auburn-haired student, enrolled at Trinity School in Cumbria, England, tells the UK Telegraph. “And then burst into tears. I’ve had the same color for the past three years, and nobody at school has commented on it.“ (Reay didn’t immediately respond to Yahoo Parenting’s request for comment).
Reay, who lives in Carlisle, was given the news after her Easter vacation on April 13. "I was told my hair had been a bone of contention since the beginning of the school year, but they had let it slip up until now,” she says. "But the laughable thing is my hair was brighter than this on prom night, and I won best hairstyle award." 

Her parents, Julie and Andy Reay, say they visited the school to talk with Emily’s teachers and were told their daughter had to change or tone down the shade by Monday or she’d be banned from the building. “The school’s uniform policy clearly states no unnatural hair colors, like blue or green,” Julie says. “Is ginger not a natural hair color?" 
Not, apparently, in such a radiant shade as Reay’s. “Trinity School…students are role models for the rest of the school,” Reay’s head teacher, Andrew Winter, writes in a statement to The Telegraph. “We have a policy of maintaining high standards…Students are issued with information about what is acceptable or unacceptable at the start of the academic year. The vast majority of parents are very keen on our high standards." 
This shocking ban is just the latest outrageous school rule making headlines. In September, yoga pants, skinny jeans and leggings were banned for female students at Devils Lake High School in North Dakota because officials ruled the look “too distracting.” In March a 16-year-old in Texas was prohibited from asking her friend prom because they are both gay. That same month, a London elementary school barred kids from watching a solar eclipse during class, reportedly for religious reasons. And in the past, students have even been banned from wearing American flag T-Shirts on Cinco de Mayo.
Reay’s fight isn’t about her making a style statement though, she says. The student insists that she’s known as that “young ginger singer” in her community. “For me it is all about confidence,” she tells the Irish Mirror. “If I had to dye my hair brown, I would lose that." 
Source

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In much of Asia high school students are not allowed to have crazy hair, as it distracts students from the education at hand.
it seemed that it is not her natural hair color... if it was natural this is wrong, but since it seems it is dyed, i don't see what is wrong with asking someone to not dye their hair.
it is probably based on cultural context, as the Western world focuses so much on individualism while much of the rest of the world is a community based mindset. 
while many people in the current generation may not see what is wrong with yoga pants or skinny jeans... what if our kids' generation goes to school with girls who are wearing a secondary pair of panties over their panties and call it pants? because if you go back 50 years, the idea of going out in yoga pants is probably just as ridiculous... 
there was once a time when if a man was not in a suit and hat, it was like going to work in a ripped t shirt with pajama pants with bed head... 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue..