Student sample for assessment
Written by a Year 7 student in Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Dear Principal,
I am writing to submit my position on the proposal to introduce a school uniform. While I understand the arguments for uniforms, I believe our school should not introduce one. Instead, I recommend we address the underlying concerns through other means. I know uniforms are promoted as a way to reduce social pressure and create school identity. However, uniforms do not solve the underlying problem — they just move it. Students still create hierarchies, and uniforms simply shift the comparison from clothing to other markers: shoes, accessories, lunch boxes, family wealth. Meanwhile, uniforms create a real cost burden for families with less money. A uniform policy can advantage families who can afford the brand-new uniform while disadvantaging those who must buy second-hand versions or go without. This seems the opposite of fair. Uniforms also restrict freedom of expression at a critical age. Secondary school is when students are developing their identity. What a person wears is one way they communicate who they are. Many students in our school express themselves through fashion choices. A uniform policy removes this avenue for self-expression at exactly the age when it matters most. Rather than introducing uniforms, I suggest our school address social pressure through other means: anti-bullying programs, community building that values different strengths, and conversations about respect and inclusion. These address the root problem — unkindness — rather than hiding it under a uniform. I also note that purchasing uniforms creates upfront costs that some families simply cannot meet. If the goal is to reduce stress and inequality, uniforms may create the opposite effect. Our school has built a respectful, inclusive community. I believe we can maintain that — and strengthen it — without uniforms. Respectfully, [Year 7 student]