A student may appeal a principal’s decision in accordance with policy FNG (LOCAL). Any student whoposts nonschool material without prior approval will be subject to disciplinary action in accordance withthe <strong>Student</strong> Code of Conduct. Materials displayed without the principal’s approval will be removed.Nonschool Materials from othersWritten or printed materials, handbills, photographs, pictures, films, tapes, or other visual or auditorymaterials not sponsored by the district or by a district-affiliated school-support organization will not besold, circulated, distributed, or posted on any district premises by any district employee or by persons orgroups not associated with the district, except as permitted by policy GKDA. To be considered fordistribution, any nonschool material must meet the limitations on content established in the policy,include the name of the sponsoring person or organization, and be submitted to the campus principal forprior review. The campus principal will approve or reject the materials within two school days of thetime the materials are received. The requestor may appeal a rejection in accordance with the appropriatedistrict complaint policy. [See policies at DGBA, FNG, or GF.]Prior review will not be required for:• Distribution of materials by an attendee to other attendees of a school-sponsored meeting intended foradults and held after school hours.• Distribution of materials by an attendee to other attendees of a community group meeting held afterschool hours in accordance with policy GKD (LOCAL) or a noncurriculum-related student groupmeeting held in accordance with FNAB (LOCAL).• Distribution for electioneering purposes during the time a school facility is being used as a pollingplace, in accordance with state law.All nonschool materials distributed under these circumstances must be removed from district propertyimmediately following the event at which the materials are distributed.DRESS AND GROOMINGThe district’s dress code is established to teach grooming and hygiene, prevents disruption, andminimizes safety hazards. <strong>Student</strong>s and parents may determine a student’s personal dress and groomingstandards in accordance with the requirements outlined in the <strong>Student</strong> Code of Conduct.It is the campus administrator’s or designee’s responsibility to insure that enforcement of this policy isdone so in a consistent manner with respect to community standards and age appropriateness. While it isinevitable that there will be differences of opinion regarding the appropriateness of a student’s attire, thefinal decision lies with the building administrator.The district’s dress code is established to teach grooming and hygiene, prevent disruption, and minimizesafety hazards. <strong>Student</strong>s and parents may determine a student’s personal dress and grooming standards,provided that they comply with the following:DressThe following modes of dress or grooming are PROHIBITED.• Clothing, including tee shirts, which displays sex, violence, drugs, tobacco, alcohol, death, gang or hateslogans or pictures• Short shorts, skirts (must be at least fingertip length)• Pants, shorts, and skirts with holes or tears above the knee• Pants, shorts, and skirts worn below the waist (“sagging” garments are not acceptable)- 21 -
• Pajamas• Underwear as outerwear, exposed underwear (appropriate undergarments must be worn at all times.)• Exposed midriff or cleavage• Trench coats or dusters• See-through shirts (e.g. thin or mesh)• Spaghetti straps, tank tops, basketball jersey (unless worn over an appropriate garment, i.e. tee shirt)• Oversize, or overlong baggy jeans (pants with legs that totally cover/hide shoes are inappropriate)• Oversize or overlong baggy shirts (tall tee’s”)• Leggings without appropriate clothing which extend over and cover the hips• House shoes, slippers• Barefoot• Chains on clothing or wallets, or as necklaces• Any inappropriately worn or mode of clothing that is disruptive (tops or pants that are too tight)Grooming• Non-natural colored hair (green, blue, purple, orange, cherry red, etc.)• Hats, caps, sunglasses• Hairstyles that are disruptive (head and facial)• Bandannas, hairnets, skull caps• Body piercing jewelry• Jewelry – swastikas, pentagram (a pentagram is permitted if worn as a religious symbol), spoons, anddrug related items• Heavy or spiked jewelry (e.g. dog collars, heavy chains)• Body paint• Tattoos with provocative, profane or offensive pictures or writing- 22 -