kaz1
et tu
Yeah, but it's a boys school.Does this mean you can't have long hair!!!?
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Yeah, but it's a boys school.Does this mean you can't have long hair!!!?
Hahaas evidenced by your av![]()
http://www.theherald.com.au/news/lo...n-for-colourful-booragul-student/1738489.aspx
Seriously people need to lighten up.
My uncle dropped me off at school once, all his kids go to broughton anglican and i went to public schooling, he nearly had a heart attack when he saw a student in my grade with a mohawk.lol bogans
Yeah, Catholic Schools are really uptight about these things. In my school you couldn't have hair that went beyond the collar but you can't shave your head either and the only colour I think you can dye your hair is a natural colour.
Lol, Broughton.My uncle dropped me off at school once, all his kids go to broughton anglican and i went to public schooling, he nearly had a heart attack when he saw a student in my grade with a mohawk.
AHAHAHAHAHHAHA that is bad.lol, our school has razors and shaving cream if you get a little bit of facial hair.
The razors are horrible.
i think i found the problem herePhylicity
i think i found the problem herePhylicity
Headlines on Today Tonight/ ACA.What about if it was for the world's greatest shave?
I think it goes a bit far expelling someone 12 weeks out from their HSC because of the wrong colour stockings.If they're the school rules, and she knows that, then she's at fault. I'm not saying it's not frustrating, or whatever, but it's really not worth making an issue of. She doesn't have to stay at the school if she can't bear to change her hair colour. And if she really wants to stay at the school, then it's not that much of a sacrifice to dye it back.
I went to a private school which had very strict uniform regulations. It was a great school for me, and I felt very lucky to go there. Although I didn't like the uniform much, I pretty much just wore it as we were supposed to. There were always kids who felt angry and resentful about it, but they were the ones that just kept breaking the rules, even though they were very clear. It was like those kids were above everyone else, and thought there should be a separate set of expectations for them, because they were so special.
Frankly, I think it's a spoilt way to act. If you're lucky enough that your parents can afford to send you to a private/Catholic school, then be grateful for it, or tell them it's not your thing and go somewhere else. All schools have pros and cons, nowhere's going to be perfect. In some ways, I would've loved to go to a school where I could wear Converse, and shorts, (we always had to wear dresses/skirts) and where we didn't have to go to Chapel services once a week. But there were things that I really liked about my school, so in the end, it didn't matter.
I think this girl is making a big deal out of nothing, and should either stick to the rules or go somewhere else. Any sort of system, whether it be school, uni, work, or society, has certain expectations. When these are as clear as school rules, by attending a certain school, one would assume that they were implicitly agreeing to those rules by becoming a part of that system.
But that's not what happened.I think it goes a bit far expelling someone 12 weeks out from their HSC because of the wrong colour stockings.