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Teacher Wellness

Are Dress Codes for Educators Simply Out of Fashion?

As the business and tech worlds move away from enforcing strict dress codes, it鈥檚 time to reevaluate what鈥檚 expected of educators.

February 10, 2023

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It鈥檚 not unusual to see Alexis Neumann, the superintendent of Rapoport Academy Public Schools, wearing jeans to work, and the district head doesn鈥檛 bat an eye when she sees staff members dressed similarly.

As the leader of a small group of charter schools in Waco, Texas, serving predominantly low-income families, Neumann acknowledges that the work, though rewarding, is challenging鈥攑hysically, emotionally, and cognitively. It鈥檚 important that her team feel comfortable while they do it.

鈥淲e require a lot of our teachers,鈥 she says. 鈥淥ne of the things we expect is that they are with kids, on the ground with them, in community with them. That鈥檚 really hard to do in a suit or in heels.鈥

Though there are several nearby schools where educators are asked to dress more formally, a relaxed dress code policy has been a hallmark of school culture across all of the Rapoport Academy campuses since the schools were founded in 1998. And they haven鈥檛 seen any reasons to reconsider. Though the arguments for stricter dress codes are many鈥攖hey reinforce school discipline, reduce classroom distractions, and mirror societal expectations, advocates say鈥擭eumann reports no negative impact from Rapoport鈥檚 dress policies. In fact, it鈥檚 an approach they believe has paid off, something the district leads with and explicitly communicates when recruiting new talent. 

In a candidates鈥 market, where schools are competing against each other for the best of the best, the difference between an educator taking one job over the next may come down to the details. Neumann sees relaxed dress code as a signal of a supportive culture and an incentive worth mentioning: 鈥淧utting that statement in the forefront lets us have follow-up conversations about what we really emphasize,鈥 she explains. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not worried about what you wear. We鈥檙e really only worried about the learning that鈥檚 happening in the classroom. We treat our staff as professionals, and they respond as such.鈥 

A BONE OF CONTENTION

The subject of educator dress has long been a hot-button issue. While many would agree that clothing shouldn鈥檛 鈥渄istract from student learning, disrupt the school environment, or cause disharmony in the workplace,鈥 as , what that means in practice is not only open for interpretation but often up for debate. 

In 2008, a teachers鈥 union in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana, expressed concerns to the school board over inequitable : One school鈥檚 principal allowed educators to wear capri pants and blue jeans, another prohibited the same items, while yet another required an educator鈥檚 shoes to match their outfit. The Jefferson Federation of Teachers deemed this to be unfair. 鈥淲e have this disparate treatment across the parish. We鈥檙e one school system, and all employees need to be treated the same,鈥 said the union鈥檚 secretary-treasurer, Meladie Munch. 

After noticing some staff straying from what he considered 鈥減rofessional attire,鈥 a New York City elementary school principal in 2012; reactions were mixed. 鈥淚 think we need to teach our children early on that there鈥檚 a certain way you dress to go to a ball game versus going to your job,鈥 principal Marlon Hosang explained, undoubtedly speaking for many. But a parent in the community, Noemi Hernandez, found the policy too strict for an elementary school: 鈥淭hey鈥檙e dealing with paint and all kinds of things sitting on the floor,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see anything wrong with jeans or even sneakers.鈥 

Politics can find its way into wardrobes, too. In 2022, an administrator in Kershaw County, South Carolina, asked two teachers wearing Black History Month shirts to change them. Initially, he concluded that other than the school鈥檚 name would be permitted but later changed course, permitting shirts commemorating birthdays or other holidays. Recently, in Wisconsin adopted what they鈥檙e calling a 鈥渂usiness casual鈥 dress code, which explicitly excludes educators from wearing T-shirts, jeans, sweatshirts, sweatpants, 鈥渢ight or ill-fitting clothing,鈥 tennis shoes, and baseball caps, among other items. Their reasoning? Staff members, the policy suggests, must 鈥渟et an example in dress and grooming for their students to follow.鈥 

But many, like Erika Niles, principal of Green Trails Elementary School in Missouri, worry that dress codes for educators are an extension of other forms of professional micromanagement and control鈥攐nes that stifle identity and perpetuate the idea that 鈥渢here is a dominant culture to which we all should adhere.鈥 She adds she鈥檚 never had to address inappropriate educator dress in her two years as a school leader. 鈥淭he pushback I鈥檝e heard is鈥 鈥榃ell, what if they wear a Speedo?鈥 Quite frankly, I trust my teachers to make those professional decisions,鈥 she says. 鈥淭eachers are professionals. They should be given autonomy and trust unless they prove otherwise. And then, it鈥檚 a conversation and not a reprimand. We are in this together.鈥

Absent high-level direction from national educator groups or the U.S. Department of Education, school boards, superintendents, and principals are left to make decisions based on what they personally believe constitutes professional, appropriate dress. Educators occupy a uniquely precarious position, since many regard them as setting an example for how students should dress as adults鈥攅ven if that鈥榮 not the message they鈥榬e trying to send with what they wear. 

鈥淲hat you don鈥檛 want to do is dress like your students,鈥 says Dan Domenech, executive director of AASA, the School Superintendents Association. 鈥淵ou want to set a tone that you are a role model, and this is what a responsible adult looks like in today鈥榮 world.鈥

But have we taken stock of what it means to dress appropriately in a rapidly evolving professional landscape? If one goal of educator dress codes is to model real-world career norms for students, then ironically, relaxing the policies may be the more logical decision.

WHAT DOES A PROFESSIONAL LOOK LIKE?

The trend toward more casual dress began as early as 10鈥15 years ago, in 2019, about the time millennials began entering the workforce. As the in the United States today, millennials have surpassed baby boomers in numbers, and the trend of employers moving away from more formal attire is growing to suit their new employees鈥 needs. 

Some of the largest, most profitable companies in the world, like Apple and Facebook (Meta)鈥攚here the same needs for productivity, focus, and self-control are germane as they are in schools鈥攈ave shifted toward the new normal, allowing employees to wear T-shirts and casual tops, jeans, and sneakers like their respective founders, Steve Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg. Hundreds of thousands of highly paid employees at these companies are regularly releasing world-changing products, from software you can talk with to self-driving cars. The companies think 鈥渢hat if employees are comfortable in what they are wearing, they can do their best work and feel more excited and included to come to work,鈥 . 

The pandemic raised the ante yet again, transforming what people wore to work, and industries across the country adapted to the times to support it. Trend forecasters are calling it a transition from 鈥渂usiness casual鈥 to 鈥渂usiness comfort,鈥 according to , with employees returning to their physical places of work dressed in some of the loungewear and athleisure they鈥檇 grown accustomed to. 

Many companies have followed suit without apparent repercussions to employee performance. In 2019, investment banking behemoth Goldman Sachs loosened guidelines to welcome what they called a more 鈥渇lexible鈥 dress sense; female flight attendants on airline Virgin Atlantic can now wear pants whenever they fly and work without wearing makeup; and department store Target began allowing employees to wear blue jeans鈥攁 significant shift from their signature red shirts and khakis, . 

For a lot of schools, meanwhile, the transition has been much more slow-moving and fraught. Some view trends away from more formal dress as unprofessional, at times bordering on inappropriate. Others think of educator dress codes as a thin veil separating order and chaos inside classrooms鈥攁 factor that significantly impacts and how easy classes are to manage, as well as student productivity levels and academic outcomes. 

But there鈥檚 not a lot of evidence for it. Meanwhile, in Missouri鈥檚 Boonville School District, assistant superintendent Fred Smith has observed similar positive benefits of relaxing dress codes, as in the business world. 鈥淲e wanted to minimize stress on our teachers,鈥 he says. 鈥淓ducators have thanked administrators many times for the 鈥榗omfortable鈥 work environment and less stress during the pandemic.鈥 Smith and the superintendent agree that there have been no negative reactions or repercussions鈥攏o spikes in misbehavior, significant dips in academic performance, or general complaints. Rather, he鈥檚 noticed that students feel more confident speaking and building relationships with their teachers. 

Amid more relaxed dress guidelines, Smith has every bit of faith that his staff will continue to bridge the gap between comfort and professionalism, stating emphatically that 鈥渙ur teachers are true professionals and dress appropriately for the occasion.鈥 

A WAY FORWARD

The controversy surrounding educator dress code may appear to some like a trivial tug of war鈥攅specially in context with pressing systemic issues like student and staff mental health or inadequate school funding鈥攂ut these policies remain an important background condition for many employees.

Though schools are not businesses, working to provide a high-quality education is not wholly unlike working to create and sustain high-quality products and services. Both environments require employees to be trustworthy, innovative, dedicated, and adaptable鈥攁nd recent developments in the business world indicate that productivity, professionalism, and more relaxed dress codes can coexist. One way to think about it: Why shouldn鈥檛 schools be open to adapting, embracing, and incorporating what other industries have seamlessly and successfully adopted without adverse effects鈥攑articularly if it means that school environments will feel more inclusive and that educators will be happier or even perform better?

In of 2,000 employed Americans conducted by One Poll, 82 percent said that feeling comfortable in their clothes at work allowed them to be more productive, while 56 percent said that comfortable clothes were a major contributor to their work confidence. Seventy-one percent said that working in casual clothes allowed them to focus on their work, rather than their outfits. 

Determining what feels balanced and equitable for one set of educators doesn鈥檛 necessarily translate throughout the school, let alone the district or state. Well-meaning incentives like charging educators a fee for the ability to dress more casually can come off as demeaning or arbitrary, says high school English teacher Kelly Scott. In many districts, jeans particularly seem to be 鈥渢he one touch point that administrators want to control over everything else,鈥 but Scott isn鈥榯 quite sure of why: 鈥淚 [sometimes] wonder if this is just another way to show that there is someone in control, to kind of keep us feeling like we can鈥檛 just go rogue.鈥

After years of paying $25 to which allows staff to wear jeans on Mondays, Scott decided she was done spending her hard-earned money. 鈥淚f educators can survive a pandemic and teach at the level that they were teaching with all of these different extenuating circumstances, then obviously what we wear doesn鈥檛 have much or any bearing on an educator鈥檚 ability to teach inside the classroom,鈥 she says.

Having no dress code at all can lead to all sorts of unexpected challenges鈥攑roviding educators who may be looking for guidance with more questions than answers. But increasingly, strict dress codes can feel like a jarring disconnect from the way other professional fields are treated, and they run the risk of leaving staff feeling micromanaged, restricted, and diminished. 

Executive director of the Association of American Educators Colin Sharkey believes that working together to cocreate dress code policies can prevent misunderstandings and confusion. Intentional conversations between school board members, school leaders, staff, and parents about expectations and how to meet them can help all groups come to a common understanding.

鈥淢embers of Congress have to wear suits when they鈥檙e on the floor of Congress, but when they鈥檙e campaigning, they wear something different,鈥 Sharkey explains. 鈥淭here鈥檚 different attire for different circumstances. If there鈥檚 buy-in from the staff, they鈥檝e agreed to a certain dress code, and it鈥檚 written clearly and fairly, there鈥檚 far fewer opportunities for frustration and discomfort. Everything depends on the type of educator environment that you teach in and what the community has come up with.鈥 

Some schools, like Christian Brothers Academy in Lincroft, New Jersey, despite largely suspending the educator dress code during online instruction, have gradually made their way back to their prepandemic expectations. Teacher dress mirrors student dress: Oxford-style button-down shirt, dress pants, and tie. Women on the faculty are expected to dress similarly, business casual or better. Humanities teacher Henry Seton acknowledges that what works for them may not work for other schools, and that鈥檚 OK. 鈥淛ust as with students, school leaders have the right to set a dress code for adults with the school鈥檚 mission in mind, but ideally it should also be as minimally restrictive as possible so as not to limit teacher expression and identity,鈥 he says. 

Meanwhile, back in Missouri at Green Trails Elementary School, Principal Niles has a lot of other things on her mind outside of dress codes. She says that if asked, she wouldn鈥檛 be able to recall what her staff wore that day because she was busy focusing on more important matters, like the way educators interacted with kids and one another. 鈥淭here鈥檚 not a whole lot I love more in this world than teachers,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey are the hardest-working people I know. And I think my greatest responsibility as a leader is to eliminate distractions that get in the way of meeting the needs of students. To me, that鈥檚 what a dress code is. It鈥檚 a distraction.鈥

As for the educator whose recent Tweet when she shared that she was dress-coded for wearing bell-bottom jeans to school on a 鈥70s dress day, violating the school鈥檚 denim policy, Niles had a few words for her. 鈥淭hat brilliant woman in her bell-bottom jeans would be welcome in our school any day,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd the only thing I might ask is where she got them.鈥

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