Duncanville High School in Texas
was the scene of a mass uprising Wednesday after 170 students were sent
home for violating the dress code and anadditional unknown number were
given in-school suspensions. As reported by KDFW Fox 4, administrators even called upon local police to help control the situation.
Student
Jose Marquez was suspended on Wednesday and said, “The teacher just
calls me and tells me to lift my shirt up and I didn’t have a belt on.
So [no] belt and ID and got kicked out.” Edward Ramirez, a junior with a
3.5 GPA said he had never been written up before the dress code sweep.
He told KDFW, “The staff told me that my shirt was out of dress code
despite the fact that it is a school spirit shirt.” The dress code does
include an exception to the policy allowing principals to OK school
spirit shirts like the one Ramirez wore, on stipulated days. Some
students said that faculty allowed the spirit shirts on most days.
As
news of the student suspensions spread, protests began and a food fight
reportedly started in the cafeteria around 11:30 a.m. and migrated to
the school hallways. Brittany Hall, a Duncanville High School senior
told KDFW, “The class just got fed up and things were being thrown like
trash cans, tables, and food. We actually had to hide underneath a table
just to not get hit by everything that was flying.” The KDFW helicopter
camera captured a “heavy police presence” outside the school around 1
p.m. Things had apparently gotten out of control and administrators
decided to call in the authorities to regain order, but no arrests were
reported.
Senior
Arturo Moreno responded, “I get that. They’re enforcing the rules and
they’re supposed to do that. But for them to not do that all year? It’s
the last two weeks of school and now they want to enforce it?” Parent
Karen Williams, whose son was sent home for wearing a school band shirt,
said, “I’m pissed off. It was crazy.” Still, other parents were in
agreement with enforcing the school policy. “It’s important to maintain
order and maintain uniformity in the school system,” said Jacqueline
Saldana, a parent who is a first grade teacher in the school district
and has a son at Duncanville High.
KXAS NBC 5
reports that some students vowed to continue to violate the dress code
in protest. On Thursday when students returned to class, administrators
said some were turned away for violating the dress code, but otherwise
the day was “normal and orderly.”
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