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School
Uniforms Don’t
Improve Achievement
By Jessica Pollard
For years, school uniforms were associated
with Catholic schools and the elite private schools. However,
since the early 1990s a uniform movement has been occurring in
public schools across the country. Currently 23 percent of all
public schools require students to wear uniforms in an effort
to raise academic achievement and curb school violence. However,
a new book by a University of Missouri-Columbia researcher contends
that school uniform policies are not effective in either of these
efforts.
"It is assumed that school uniforms make
students feel better about themselves and, in turn, make them
more internally motivated to succeed," said David Brunsma,
assistant sociology
professor. "Several experimental factors can contribute to
or contradict this outcome, including parental involvement, communication,
student preparedness for school, positive approaches to learning,
educational climates and safe schools."
Brunsma's book, The School Uniform Movement
and What It Tells Us About American Education: A Symbolic
Crusade, analyzes the function of school uniforms based on
different areas of interest, including legal, anecdotal, empirical
and theoretical. Brunsma's research, which began in 1996, was
sparked by President Clinton's effort to implement school uniforms
to crack down on gangs and violence in predominately minority
and poor areas of the country.

David Brunsma, assistant
sociology professor
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In his study, Brunsma evaluated students from
elementary, middle and senior high schools based on age, gender,
education, socioeconomic status, political climate, type of school,
student body characteristics and other various stimuli. His study
concluded that schools in which uniform policies were enforced
did not experience positive or negative effects overall. There
was no empirical relationship between a uniform code and student
achievement, substance abuse or violence, Brunsma said.
"Despite numerous efforts at summarization,
there has yet to be a comprehensive look at the details of experimental
research on the issue of school uniforms," Brunsma said.
"This in-depth analysis of the issue can allow researchers
to better conclude how uniform policies affect the academic achievement
of students and the learning environments in which they interact."
Brunsma's book was published this year by
an imprint of Rowan & Littlefield: Scarecrow Education.
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Last Update:
November 15, 2007
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