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Secondary education

"smart business suit" for sixth form - bit tacky or a good idea? Mixed 6th

200 replies

Sparrows12 · 28/11/2012 08:33

I'm in the "bit tacky" camp myself. Don't want daughter going to school everyday dressed like a candidate from the Apprentice. There are plenty of years to get used to dressing for the world of work, so why start at 16, especially as these children will be back in jeans etc for university. A sixth form uniform would be my strong preference. And i can foresee all sorts of disagreements in Next, Top Shop etc over what is "smart". I already find myself fighting to keep quiet about unsuitable (frankly "large handbag-style") bags being taken to school - aargh, and school shoes from unsuitable places like top shop that last one term before falling apart.

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MisForMumNotMaid · 28/11/2012 08:40

We had a dress in your own clothes policy in 6th Form. Basically 95% of us dressed in jeans and a t-shirt/ polo type top.

Suits aren't that practical are they for rain/ drizzle and heat in summer. Much easier to wash/ iron a jumper than a suit jacket. Its all that carrying around from class to class that would bother me. A jumper ties around your waist or gets put in a bag, a jacket wouldn't stand much of that.

My parents gave me an allowance for clothes and shoes. I learnt quite quickly because the fancy boots I'd brought didn't last long on the 4 mile each way walk/ bike ride.

Is there a bag policy that you're trying to get your DD to adhere too? Isn't the school bag the thing of self expression in a uniformed environment?

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Sparrows12 · 28/11/2012 08:49

Actually the school doesn't have a bag policy - certainly not for y10 and over - and the girls do not adopt common sense at all - eg the "large handbag" in question is not large enough for ordinary A4 ringbinders, which have to be carried separately under her arm (sigh). She is exceptionally hard working and gets great results though, so I keep quiet, in the hope that one day she will see sense. The "business suit" is the uniform of a competing sixth form we are looking at for next year. It is supposed to reflect their "getting down to business" ethos.

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webwiz · 28/11/2012 09:41

My DCs school sixth form has a "business wear" uniform. My DDs quite liked it especially DD2 who won the "best dressed" award at the leaving dinner. Now that DD2 is applying for work placements as part of her university course at least she has interview stuff to wear.

I don't really care what they wear as I don't think it makes that much difference but I don't think it looks "tacky" its just a more flexible version of school uniform.

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bruffin · 28/11/2012 09:53

Not sure what's tacky about it.

Dcs school have a business wear. At the moment ds has 3 suits a a few pairs of business type trousers. He isn't wearing a suit jacket at the moment, just a smart winter coat shirt and tie.

Think it's going to be cheaper to outfit dd, but more problematic as she is a very jeans and tshirt girl who doesn't do smart.

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AuntAda · 28/11/2012 09:59

I really hate it, tbh. If you can't make really daft ill-judged fashion choices when you're 16 or 17, then really when can you? Surely that's what the 6th form is for, getting it out of your system. I also don't like the implication that the world of work always involves a polyester suit, cos for lots of people it really doesn't. And they're hardly going to wear suits at university regardless of what kind of career they end up going into, so what is the point, really.

Having said that if I really liked a school in every other way, I wouldn't let it put me off. I suppose.

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EmpressOfTheMadBoxOfFrogs · 28/11/2012 10:01

I can identify with your DD, after years in a jeans and T-shirt job I'm now having to break out the office wear, but can she at least get away with smart trouser suits?

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ImperialStateKnickers · 28/11/2012 10:03

The school guidelines may say 'business suit' but is it actually followed? Have you been to the school and seen the current sixth form in their natural plumage Grin? Ours had 'office wear' in the guidelines, but in fact everyone lived in jeans.

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NotMostPeople · 28/11/2012 10:04

DD's school have this policy, she isn't in the 6th form yet but we both laugh at how 'business attire' has been interpreted by most of the students. If they wear a jacket then more or less anything goes with the exception of jeans. So leggings, short skirts etc are all seen daily. I wouldn't worry about it.

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IWipeArses · 28/11/2012 10:06

What if you don't want to go 'into business' later though? What if you want to be an artist? Or work in theatre? Do they only study business?

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Mintyy · 28/11/2012 10:07

I'm quite shocked by this, tbh! What if you go to sixth form and University and have no intention of ever working in a corporate environment? And as someone else said, at University or College they can wear whatever on earth they like anyway. I really sincerely hope that my dc sixth form college (when they eventually go) won't force them all to dress like teenage business men/women.

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Mintyy · 28/11/2012 10:09

I am 50 and am proud to have never worn a suit in my life Grin.

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HullyEastergully · 28/11/2012 10:09

They want to introduce this at my dc's school...I am FURIOUS, they don't all want to be little soldiers of empire or corporate drones. Am fighting.

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tiggytape · 28/11/2012 10:12

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

phlebas · 28/11/2012 10:13

or be a doctor? Or an academic? Or work in IT? Or the forces!?

My dd's school has "business smart" for 6th form - I think it is idiotic & incredibly tacky. The boys have to wear suits & they achieve a level of smartness between estate agent & mobile phone salesman. The girls aren't quite so bad. The high achieving schools locally have very relaxed dress codes & yet somehow the students still manage to do exceptionally well Hmm

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camilamoran · 28/11/2012 10:15

My son's school insists on suits for sixth formers and also for teachers. They look like a bunch of estate agents or, when they all walk into a room together, like Reservoir Dogs. The school is very business oriented: the dress code does express this accurately, so is basically a good thing. It would be confusing talking to someone who looks like a teacher or an academic when they are essentially a salesperson.

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outtolunchagain · 28/11/2012 10:16

They have this at my ds school , he left last year . I don't like it especially , not keen on jeans either but surely there is a middle way . What used to amuse dh and I who do have 'corporate jobs ' is how dated the schools idea of 'office wear is'

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happystory · 28/11/2012 10:16

I think the aim at dd's school (girls, but some boys in 6th form) is that by saying business attire, it stops them wearing jeans, Converse, short/strappy tops etc. I think in the long run it saves money as it's like a uniform, you wear the same clothes every week. If there was no uniform, I think dd would want/need more new clothes....

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Wallison · 28/11/2012 10:19

Gosh, it sounds awful. Why on earth not let them wear what they like? There's plenty of time later for wearing suits and all that crap if they get a job where they have to.

[thinks back wistfully to her own days of bright pink hair, skirts with the bottoms chopped off and DMs]

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phlebas · 28/11/2012 10:23

my dsis' school (private, selective, v. academic all girls) has this dress code - no body con dresses, no short shorts unless opaque tights underneath, no crop tops/visible tummy buttons & no bras or bra straps to be showing. That amused me quite a lot - it is pretty much a uniform of skinnies & converse - & it their reward for having suffered years of a uniform that looks very much like a supermarket's & included green sheer tights

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bruffin · 28/11/2012 10:29

They get to wear their own clothes at the weekend or after school. I dont get this pathetic need to show that your are "different" through clothes. They all end up wearing some sort of uniform anyway to conform to their peers even if they are a bit more extreme ie goths

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HullyEastergully · 28/11/2012 10:34

It's not about showing you're "different," it's about being a human being and choosing how to dress yourself. Fair enough to say no tits out/bare midriffs etc, but not to make them dress like bank clerks.

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IWipeArses · 28/11/2012 10:40

bruffin, why the pathetic need to make them all the same?

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breatheslowly · 28/11/2012 10:44

I think teenage girls are able to make anything look tacky if they want to. We were allowed to wear whatever we wanted in the 6th form and I remember an assembly announcement, "It's cold, you might like to wear more clothes". But cheap, shiny suits with incredibly short skirts would look tacky and are an unnecessary expense. Business style shoes can be painful and damaging to feet if you aren't careful.

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bruffin · 28/11/2012 10:52

"it's about being a human being and choosing how to dress yourself"

You can be a human being and dress suitably for the occasion. Even the boys have a multitude of different colours and styles that count as business wear. Its sad that you feel clothes make your personality.

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Jins · 28/11/2012 11:12

DSs sixth form has a long list of clothes that are unsuitable including combat gear and 'offensive anagrams' but clean, smart denim is on the approved list and I'm pretty happy with the guidelines overall.

I have noticed that the girls who wore pretty outrageous stuff in Year 11 started off in lower sixth in outfits they'd go clubbing in and within weeks had settled into chinos and hoodies :)

It seems to me that nothing has changed from my sixth form days. If you create a barrier it will be pushed. If you set a reasonable standard of appearance it seems to be respected.

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