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What should I do if the school stipulates to wear school uniforms? School uniforms are ugly to wear …

It seems that primary and secondary school students must wear school uniforms, which has become the consensus of the education sector and even the whole society. Few people disagree with this. When people talk about this problem, they are not talking about wearing or not, but what to wear. It seems that it has become a conclusion that primary and secondary school students wear school uniforms, so there is no need to discuss it. In my opinion, this problem is far from being discussed clearly. Once a person's thinking is stereotyped, it will become rigid, will not doubt anything unreasonable, and will not try to change it. "Always right" is the consistent way of thinking of China people. In the Diary of a Madman, Mr. Lu Xun once shouted: "It has never been like this, has it?" This sentence is still inspiring. I want to tell a real joke first to see how serious the mindset of some of our comrades is and how rigid their thoughts are. When my daughter was in primary school, the president's wife of a certain country visited the school. Students could and should have been dressed in neat and beautiful clothes to welcome guests, but what a scandal! The school stipulates that everyone should wear school uniforms to welcome guests. Primary school students are in a period of intense physical development and usually have a large amount of activities, so many people's school uniforms are either too short or too worn. What are we doing? The school actually told those students whose school uniforms are too short and worn to hide in the place where foreign guests can't see them on the roof. The rest of the students, those whose school uniforms are barely visible, are in front, while others are hiding behind. My daughter was still very young at that time, so she went home to tell these stories and bent down with laughter. A child still thinks this is ridiculous. Why do school leaders and teachers think it is normal? What are the serious consequences if you don't wear school uniforms to welcome guests? I'm confused. I am worried, how can such a rigid mind educate energetic students? Those who insist that students wear school uniforms believe that wearing school uniforms will help students develop the spirit of collectivism and increase their love and cohesion for the school. This reason is completely self-deception. Some people scold their mothers behind their backs because they are dissatisfied with wearing school uniforms every day; Deliberately not washing or changing, some people are dirty in and out of school all day; After graduation, some people immediately tore their school uniforms to pieces. It can be said that quite a few students are extremely disgusted with the rule of wearing school uniforms every day, but they dare to speak out. Where can we talk about cultivating a sense of collective honor and increasing cohesion? High-sounding reasons are easy to find, but the actual situation is completely different. Some people say that students don't like to wear school uniforms because of their poor quality and style. I said there is this factor, but it can't be solved at present. You can ask people to design better styles and use better fabrics, but the price will go up, which will inevitably increase the burden on parents and make poor families worse. In places with good conditions, in addition to sportswear, students also have a set of "formal clothes" with better styles, such as suits for boys and skirts for girls, or uniforms similar to naval uniforms. But wearing such clothes needs to be matched, including ties, ties, shoes and so on. Otherwise neither fish nor fowl, it is better not to wear it. Moreover, if you wear such clothes every day, only one set is not enough. Should you change it at least once a week? Besides, what about going to physical education class? I'm afraid I can't do it without changing into sportswear and sneakers. I'm afraid most schools have no place for students to store their clothes, let alone dressing rooms. People in China are not as rich as "change the shroud, change the casual clothes, and then change the casual clothes" in Zhu Chitose's Peking Opera Feng Haichao. Because it is inconvenient to change clothes back and forth, students now wear sportswear that "grandma doesn't hurt, uncle doesn't love" every day. Those with formal clothes are also put on the shelf, which is idle for half a year, one year or even several years, causing great waste. "Attention" has completely become "doing", and I don't know what the meaning of this "attention" is. Some schools are a little looser. They are not required to wear uniforms at ordinary times, but only when the flag is raised on Monday. It is said that this is to show respect for the national flag. Is it a respect for the national flag that all the students in the school wear sportswear to salute it? What's more, there are many short, fat, faded and worn-out ones in the middle ... I don't feel any solemn atmosphere. "Funny" is the best way to describe this scene. There is also a very pleasant reason for insisting that students wear school uniforms, that is, it can prevent students from keeping up with each other in dress and help cultivate their hard-working and simple style. It is really gratifying if you can cultivate a hard-working and simple style easily by wearing the same style of clothes, but this is only the wishful thinking of teachers. There are too many things to compare, not just clothes! Sports shoes, bicycles, electronic products, parents' status, money, cars, houses, villas, and even glasses, schoolbags and various stationery can all compare with each other. Can wearing the same clothes solve the problem of comparison? As schools and teachers, instead of studying the correct ways and means to solve students' ideological problems and correcting some unhealthy psychology through patient and meticulous work, they want to replace the arduous and meticulous education process with this simple and disgusting practice. This formalism can only make teachers "out of sight, out of mind" and can't educate students at all. More ironically, some schools, under the banner of cultivating students' spirit of hard struggle, are enjoying the kickbacks from the manufacturers who contract to make school uniforms. It is by no means an individual phenomenon that school cadres are dismissed with such kickbacks. Strangely, the measures to cultivate students' hard work and simplicity have become a hotbed of corruption and degeneration of cadres and teachers. With the deepening of anti-corruption, this phenomenon is much less now, but which school dares to clap its chest and say that it has never benefited from manufacturers since the day when school uniforms were customized for students? Whether these "benefits" are personal greed or spent in other ways, do you dare to say that you haven't taken them?