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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

I know IABU

50 replies

NettleTea · 28/08/2017 21:28

but Its driving me mental.

My son starts secondary school next week. He is a lovely kind gentle boy with ASD, and when we looked around all the local schools, our closest (by miles) school, which he can walk to in 5 minutes, and which is an OFSTED outstanding, the sort of place people remortgage their grannies to get into, was the one he really REALLY was excited to go to.

My daughter (also ASD but we didnt know it at the time) went to this school and lasted a year before she had a complete breakdown and had to be taken out altogether, but little brother is a different child and he wants to go. He knows if it goes tits up we can move him or home school, but he is sure that is the school for him

My stupid big worry is about his hair (see I told you IABU and its a stupid stupid given the huge number of things I could be worried about - bullying being the main one, him being targeted because he is quite obviously 'odd' although liked by his peers from a very small primary, and he doesnt get the social interaction bit too well)

He has always had long hair. This has been his choice. He has had it cut, but we have always had to say it is being 'trimmed' because of his aversion to it being cut. If its a sensory thing or a self-image thing I dont know but he has always been adamantly against what you would call a traditional 'boys' cut. He used to scream if we took him to the hairdresser and only allowed it to be trimmed if it began to get unmanageable due to knots, as its very fine. He is used to people mistaking him for a girl, and generally corrects them, and is pretty nonchalant about their confusion - its no big deal. He is confident in himself.

Of course this school has a 'boys have to have short hair' policy.

Tomorrow he is having it all cut off. well I say all but Im thinking we will have to just keep some length and have it cut straight round at the length we can get away with, and layered through it, as he absolutely refuses to have any more taken off. He has asked our neighbour - a hairdresser - to do it but he is absolutely beside himself. he is not sleeping. he has been crying. he has been going on and on about it for the last 2 weeks and now he has just gone to bed really worried and anxious about it. Ive tried commiserating and Ive tried just being matter of fact. Nothing is helping to be honest.

He says that if there was a proper reason then he can understand it, but there just isnt. He says that it is sexist, because the girls all have long hair and some of them have short hair which look like 'boys' haircuts. It cant be about safety because they dont make the girls tie theirs back, even though he would be quite happy to tie his back. He says it cant be about going to work because he sees loads of men in work with long hair - some very successful ones. He says when you go to college before you go to work you can dye it purple and grow it to your knees and nobody says 'we are teaching you to be responsible' - he says he likes rules (this is true, he follows rules to the letter mainly because he can see they are there for a reason) but he doesnt understand the reason for this one. But he knows he has to do it if he wants to go to this school.

He says that he feels like its just because they want to break a part of him, which I feel is a little dramatic, but I guess he feels very strongly about it. He is a good student - he studies hard, he is keen to learn, he pays attention in class, he never misbehaves, has never been on the red or the yellow, always polite and helpful and has fantastic SATS results. On induction days he found the lunchtime clubs and asked to join in - he knows how to avoid the situations which could make him stand out as a target

so why am I feeling so apprehensive

OP posts:
Mysteriouscurle · 28/08/2017 21:58

I agree with your ds. It IS sexist. If girls are allowed long hair I would be surprised if they could insist on boys having their hair short. Remember the boys at the exeter school wearing skirts.

Whether you want to take this up with the school is entirely up to you.

MarklahMarklah · 28/08/2017 22:01

I also agree with your son. Hair length (or colour) has nothing to do with the ability to learn.

NettleTea · 28/08/2017 22:05

It was the only thing that made me consider not applying for that school, which seems like absolute madness, given how in demand the school is - its one of those that the catchment area appears in letters on houses for sale in the area!

Which made me feel like I was completely insane, and such a stupid reason to reject a school.

But I also felt that it may be a symbol of a much bigger picture.

Im tempted to tell him to go with the compromising haircut (basically a style he has had before, but a teensy bit shorter) and really stand out as an exceptional student who doesnt put his foot wrong. Because he will. And a well behaved kid that the teachers like can get away with a hell of a lot more than a bolshy kid that comes in with attitude. Meanwhile his head of house has suggested we meet to talk about how we can ensure his transition goes well given his ASD. May be worth mentioning the meltdowns prior to haircut in the letter suggesting we meet asap

OP posts:
NettleTea · 28/08/2017 22:07

god I thought everyone would have told me that I knew the deal, just get on with it or piss off to a different school (which would have meant paying for transport and travelling several miles, and probably having no friends in our local town, which I feel is important)

OP posts:
Buck3t · 28/08/2017 22:07

Oh my gosh. Your DS is right. I read the point that they are trying to break a little part of him. And something in me.. I can't explain it. I had to respond. He's so right, but is there anyway you can explain to him, that because he knows this, they can't break him. Agree yes it is sexist, but the way it works now, he has to go along until he's in a position to change rules that are rules for no reason.

Probably not much help, but it's hard to tell them to do the opposite when you know
they're right.

NettleTea · 28/08/2017 22:08

I think being comfortable in yourself actually benefits your ability to learn. We have had one year with him when he was unable to learn at all and started going backwards due to anxiety

OP posts:
BellMcEnd · 28/08/2017 22:10

YANBU.

My friend had the exact same problem. Her son is not ASD, just a free thinker so in the end cut his hair to just about regulation length.

Your son is right: it is double standards and sexism.

BellMcEnd · 28/08/2017 22:10
NettleTea · 28/08/2017 22:11

I DO agree with him. I 100% do. I think he is right. But I also dont want to start things off with him being singled out and attention drawn to him in the first few weeks. Perhaps we need to play a longer game and challenge it once the peer shuffling and pecking orders have done their thing and the dust settles

OP posts:
QuiteLikely5 · 28/08/2017 22:14

Can't you tell him that if he gets it done this once then the school may not notice if he grows it back a little?

or explain that since hair grows he will be able to grow it back once he leaves there? Tell him we all have to compromise in life at times

Or try telling him once he is enrolled at the school and has been going for a few months this is a subject he could raise with the school

Scoobygang7 · 28/08/2017 22:15

I agree with your boy,it's a nonsensical rule. I know this maybe going against the grain, but could the length of his hair be over looked as part of Sen care plan. Maybe agree during school hours it tied up and out of the way. Not ideal and could bring more attention to him but as it seems to be a facet of his Sen then I feel that he should supported as with any other area he would struggle in.

melj1213 · 28/08/2017 22:30

Of course this school has a 'boys have to have short hair' policy.

What exactly is the wording of the policy?

Most schools won't specify how long their hair can be, just how short it can't be ... eg no buzzcuts or bleached blonde mohicans but nothing about it's max length provided it is kept neat, tidy and a natural colour

I'd perhaps phone the school and see what the situation is re: boys hair and explain your son's ASD and whether you can compromise - eg he can keep his hair long but it must be plaited/in a ponytail/tied up neatly during the school day.

NettleTea · 28/08/2017 22:37

Pupils hair must be tidy and free of all styling agents. Hair must be off the face and of a conventional style and one natural colour. There should be no dramatic difference in length between the sides and top. Hair extensions are not allowed. Boys must be clean shaven; their hair should be above the collar and not less than a grade 2 cut

OP posts:
NettleTea · 28/08/2017 22:38

maybe I will give them a call tomorrow and see. But they seemed pretty adamant when he went to the induction day, and when he went to the welcome evening 3 different teachers told him he would need to cut it all off.

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Chocolatecoveredpeanuts · 28/08/2017 22:42

I thought the same as scooby. Doesn't it come under Sen? It's a sensory issue for him (if you present it as such, which wouldn't be wrong given he can't articulate himself exactly) and it's a source of great anxiety for him which will affect his learning far more than having slightly longer hair than the other boys - even if tied neatly back.

StarlightExpress5 · 28/08/2017 22:42

I agree with your ds, some school policies are bloody ridiculous!

Msqueen33 · 28/08/2017 22:43

Mum of two with asd here. I'd speak to the school and as he has Sen they should make reasonable adjustments. If he finds once at school he may change his mind. It is unfair. I can understand no extreme haircuts, colours etc but that's a bit crazy.

colourfulll · 28/08/2017 22:47

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Regularsizedrudy · 28/08/2017 22:47

I can't believe in this day and age stupid rules like this still exist! Can he not put it in a bun or even wear a turban? Surely there must be some Sikh students who do this?

colourfulll · 28/08/2017 22:53

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Pollypudding · 28/08/2017 22:58

I agree with your son- this is sexual discrimination

NettleTea · 28/08/2017 23:02

wow. pretty much unanimous IANBU and I was sure I was.

Im going to speak to them. Tomorrow. Im holding off on the haircut, maybe a tidy up so as not to cancel the hairdresser. But Im def going to speak to them

OP posts:
Ttbb · 28/08/2017 23:03

Well once it's cut off there won't be anything he can do about it. He may actually find that he likes it.

Pollypudding · 28/08/2017 23:06

"Their hair should be above the collar"- you could obey the letter of the law -bonkers rule- by putting it in a bun!

Spanneroo · 28/08/2017 23:07

I agree with your son. If the school had stated that girls must have hair at a minimum of shoulder-length, there'd be cries of sexism. How ridiculous!

I'd initially go down the adjustments for SEN route, but think I'd be tempted to angle towards a change in policy longer-term once your particular battle is won.

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