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Tracksuits To Become Standard School Uniform?

(244 Posts)
mae13 Mon 09-Feb-26 12:16:01

So - parents have been consulted and have given the 'Thumbs Up' for their offspring to attend school looking like Chavs?

Talk about dumbing down!

I attended a convent school and the uniform rules were fiercely imposed. God help any girl who didn't knot their tie correctly or was caught turning their skirt over at the waistband to make it shorter.

Wonderful discipline!

ViceVersa Wed 11-Feb-26 09:11:59

Oreo

ViceVersa

That's an appalling comment. I honestly thought we'd moved on from the mentality that women and girls deserved unwanted attention - or worse - just because of what they were wearing.

Get real!

Please elaborate - do you really think it's ok to blame girls for what they're wearing?

Oreo Wed 11-Feb-26 09:05:26

ViceVersa

That's an appalling comment. I honestly thought we'd moved on from the mentality that women and girls deserved unwanted attention - or worse - just because of what they were wearing.

Get real!

Wyllow3 Wed 11-Feb-26 09:02:43

"she led him on".

Well out of date now and not acceptable. Boy and girls and men and women will always play flirting BUT it's never acceptable "blame the girl" because of what they wear.

My grandchildren go to a Primary School in an area that is a mixture of very poor indeed and middle class. Their uniform is currently trousers and Polo shirts/sweat tops with badges, in the summer girls can wear a simple dress.

The cost of suits and ties type wear from proper outfitters is astronomical and completely unecessary.

At this primary school some mums had got together and they have an annual "hand me down" fair.

People bring not just uniforms but other clothes too, and people are told to pay what they can afford.... which includes nothing. Cakes and tea laid on. It's a little school, such events are not too hard to organise.

theworriedwell Wed 11-Feb-26 08:52:29

Goes both ways, boys should be told to pull their trousers up if they are flashing their backsides. I imagine girls probably do look if only to think they don't fancy boys with grubby underwear.

ViceVersa Wed 11-Feb-26 08:37:02

That's an appalling comment. I honestly thought we'd moved on from the mentality that women and girls deserved unwanted attention - or worse - just because of what they were wearing.

Deedaa Tue 10-Feb-26 23:46:16

It's all very well to say that boys Should learn to control themselves, but girls should also be taught not to walk around flashing their knickers at everyone. When I was at school it was called Jail bait.

My grandson's suit and tie has to come from the school outfitters. So does all his sports wear including the extra shorts and tops he has to wear for some classes as his place at the school is partly down to his sporting ability. The school sells second hand uniform and also has a sale of out of school clothes every year. The boys are asked to bring in any outgrown clothes because there are pupils who have problems affording any clothes.

theworriedwell Tue 10-Feb-26 20:26:36

M0nica

^The main advantage of school uniforms is that they prevent children realising that some parents are better off than others.^

That is one of the myths used to justify uniform, other children and their parents know which children come from well-off families and which do not. Children do not wear just a track suit at school, they wear socks and shoes and anoraks and change for games, they have satchels and some get free school meals and others do not.

Whether a child comes from a rich or poor home should be irrelevant, all children shuld be treated with respect regardless of background.

Hear hear.

M0nica Tue 10-Feb-26 20:18:24

The main advantage of school uniforms is that they prevent children realising that some parents are better off than others.

That is one of the myths used to justify uniform, other children and their parents know which children come from well-off families and which do not. Children do not wear just a track suit at school, they wear socks and shoes and anoraks and change for games, they have satchels and some get free school meals and others do not.

Whether a child comes from a rich or poor home should be irrelevant, all children shuld be treated with respect regardless of background.

MartavTaurus Tue 10-Feb-26 19:42:58

No tie?

Get knotted!

Allira Tue 10-Feb-26 19:36:15

Astitchintime

MartavTaurus

Astitchintime

MartavTaurus

At the moment parents can get shirts , trousers,skirts etc from supermarkets at lot less
And also school tracksuit bottoms in Marks for £14 - £20 a pair depending on size. I don't consider that expensive. They come in 3 different colours.

£14 - £20 for kids tracksuit bottoms?! That’s IS expensive, particularly when they’d need more than one pair and had siblings needing them too! Get real MartavTaurus!

Did you read a pair? That's £7 each. The price of M & S trousers are exactly that too, so no difference. I expect the likes of Asda are even cheaper.

By the way, I am very real thank you, so keep your shirt on, or your hoodie on!

RUDE!!!!!!!!

😲

Just wondering who is RUDE!

keep your shirt on, or your hoodie on!
No tie?

Grandma70s Tue 10-Feb-26 18:51:15

MartavTaurus

At DH's school, pupils wore/still wear the traditional uniform with pride. A recent vote was unanimous to keep it.
Apparently, the bright yellow stockings were originally worn to fend off rats in the City of London! 🐀 🐀 🐀
He still has the leather belt with silver buckle. That was the only item you had to pay for. Everyone was given a new uniform every few years
I can't say I'd be over keen to wear it daily!

Ah, I know which school that is!

BlessedArt Tue 10-Feb-26 18:38:03

mae13

So - parents have been consulted and have given the 'Thumbs Up' for their offspring to attend school looking like Chavs?

Talk about dumbing down!

I attended a convent school and the uniform rules were fiercely imposed. God help any girl who didn't knot their tie correctly or was caught turning their skirt over at the waistband to make it shorter.

Wonderful discipline!

Times change. Every generation will get old and start ranting about “back in my days” and everything else we don’t understand about the youth. It’s what we do as humans. We all think things were somehow better in the past once we get older. Ahh those rose-tinted glasses we tend to look at the past through grin

Fwiw, I personally thought the nuns at school were practically barbaric with the way they were allowed to “discipline”. Disproportionate, even hysterical over things now seen as normal. Such is life!

Dreadwitch Tue 10-Feb-26 18:31:42

My kids went to 2 different primary schools and both schools had a blue tracksuit as the uniform. The kids didn't look like chavs and it was cheaper for the parents.

What I do disagree with is how schools are now like mini boot camps and the uniform rules are unbelievably strict.
Kids go to school to learn and supposedly prepare for the grown up world, I'm still trying to work out what job involves a strict uniform outside of the services.

Astitchintime Tue 10-Feb-26 17:44:33

MartavTaurus

Astitchintime

MartavTaurus

At the moment parents can get shirts , trousers,skirts etc from supermarkets at lot less
And also school tracksuit bottoms in Marks for £14 - £20 a pair depending on size. I don't consider that expensive. They come in 3 different colours.

£14 - £20 for kids tracksuit bottoms?! That’s IS expensive, particularly when they’d need more than one pair and had siblings needing them too! Get real MartavTaurus!

Did you read a pair? That's £7 each. The price of M & S trousers are exactly that too, so no difference. I expect the likes of Asda are even cheaper.

By the way, I am very real thank you, so keep your shirt on, or your hoodie on!

RUDE!!!!!!!!

Lahlah65 Tue 10-Feb-26 17:15:32

MartavTaurus

I've blown hot and cold on this one for many years.

When I was Headmistress, woe betide any girls who didn't wear their kilts properly, lengthwise!
Now, in the 21st century, provided the tracksuits are school branded, and every one has the same, I think it's a good idea.

Teaching abroad for a while, where pupils don't have school uniforms at all, I can't say I noticed any deterioration in behaviour or discipline.

I am delighted to hear someone with practical experience of this. I really don’t understand why we are so obsessed with school uniform in the UK, unlike our close neighbours in Europe and even in the US. They seem to have overcome all of the problems that British schools claim will arise if there is no school uniform.

Mollygo Tue 10-Feb-26 17:14:47

Yes Norah. We are seeing a bit of victim blaming going on here.

Norah Tue 10-Feb-26 16:28:40

Paperbackwriter

"I agree that the skirts are ridiculous, barely covering the arse!
In a school full of boys with raging hormones."

Maybe one of the functions of education could be to teach the boys to control their reactions to girls, rather than teaching girls that it is up to them not to challenge the boys' impulses.

Indeed.

Perhaps teaching boys to control themselves.

It's not female clothing, rather male bad behaviour.

winterwhite Tue 10-Feb-26 16:28:09

Track suits are sport and leisure wear and IMO not appropriate for school after about age 9.

I don’t think ultra short skirts or skintight shiny trousers for girls appropriate either but school rules wil just encourage that. Best left to parents.

Doodledog Tue 10-Feb-26 16:18:15

Tracksuits are expensive because they are branded and marketed as fashion items, and tend to be made in shiny fabrics with flashes of colour. School uniform ones are totally different - usually black matte-finish (ie cotton-based) trousers and a logo sweatshirt in a contrasting colour. The children all look the same, so can be spotted in a crowd, the logo identifies the school and stops parents indulging requests for 'designer' versions, and they can look smart without being expensive.

Here is one from Lacoste at £220, and one from Sainbury's at £12. The difference is clear - one is a fashion item and the other school wear, particularly if it had a school logo on the chest.

MartavTaurus Tue 10-Feb-26 16:18:03

Uniform above.

MartavTaurus Tue 10-Feb-26 16:17:35

At DH's school, pupils wore/still wear the traditional uniform with pride. A recent vote was unanimous to keep it.
Apparently, the bright yellow stockings were originally worn to fend off rats in the City of London! 🐀 🐀 🐀
He still has the leather belt with silver buckle. That was the only item you had to pay for. Everyone was given a new uniform every few years
I can't say I'd be over keen to wear it daily!

knspol Tue 10-Feb-26 16:17:07

There are strict uniform rules at my GD's school but quite frankly the majority of students look incredibly scruffy. Trousers or skirts never been pressed, shirts often not even ironed and shoes that have never seen a sign of polish. There are exceptions to this of course but in general they're a really scruffy lot so track suits might be an improvement.

Missiseff Tue 10-Feb-26 16:16:59

mae13

So - parents have been consulted and have given the 'Thumbs Up' for their offspring to attend school looking like Chavs?

Talk about dumbing down!

I attended a convent school and the uniform rules were fiercely imposed. God help any girl who didn't knot their tie correctly or was caught turning their skirt over at the waistband to make it shorter.

Wonderful discipline!

Thankfully we've moved on from those days. Tracksuits are much more comfortable.

Sleepyhead52 Tue 10-Feb-26 16:11:04

Paperbackwriter

"Apparently this was to stop girls wearing hipsters that might show off their figures too much 🙄. I complained, but got nowhere with it."

Good for you, Doodledog If the girls want to 'show off their figures' that's up to them. How the boys react, that's not the girls' responsibility.

But now they roll down their trackie bottoms ... guess what? To look like hipsters! (out of school uniform atm, obviously ... )

Sleepyhead52 Tue 10-Feb-26 16:09:12

Chestnut

There's an article here, and if you scroll down the poll result was 58% in favour.
www.bbc.co.uk/newsround/articles/cly5nkxy53no
There is no hope. Standards are dropping everywhere.

It's aways "Take the easy option" mostly because too many people have too many rights! I wonder where the poll was undertaken.