An 11-Year-Old Student Just Scored A Huge Win For Girls In Western Australia
The phrase “girl power” may have been popularized in
the 1990s, but the sentiment is alive and well in the Land Down Under.
Recently, authorities in Western Australia instituted a rule change that allows girls to wear pants
and shorts in public schools in the state. The change, which bucks decades of
tradition, was prompted by an impassioned plea from Sofia Myhre, an 11-year-old
student in Perth, Australia. Sofia’s handwritten letter to the state’s
education minister, Sue Ellery, argued that being limited to skirts and dresses
is “really unfair.”
“I think it’s really unfair that my brothers have
been allowed to wear shorts, and all through primary school I haven’t been
allowed to except when I have sport,” the tween wrote. “I really love kicking
the footy, netball and doing handstands at recess and lunch. It is annoying
doing these things in a skirt.”
Sofia’s mother, Krystina Myhre, is a member of Girl’s Uniform Agenda, a
group that advocates for expanded dress code options for girls throughout
Australia. Myhre encouraged her daughter to write to the department of
education to express her feelings about the antiquated rule.
Sofia Myhre's letter to Western Australia's education minister.
“My daughter and her friends have been quite unhappy
about it for some time,” Myhre said. She argued girls regularly opt out of
sports and other physical activities because they don’t feel comfortable
undertaking them in a dress. On the Girl’s Uniform Agenda website, Myhre’s group asks,
“The wearing of dresses and skirts is no longer an expectation of women in
society — so why do we continue to force this archaic stereotype on school
girls?”
Apparently, Western Australia's state education
minister agreed.
“An 11-year-old girl should be able to wear shorts to
school,” Ellery told Perth Now. “In 2017, girls should be able to wear
clothes that don’t restrict their ability to participate in physical activity
at school.”
The rule change doesn’t apply to all of the schools
in Western Australia, however. Private schools are exempt from having to offer female
students expanded uniform options, and institutions in other parts of the
country have been slow to adopt the measure. According to The New York Times, 70% of schools in
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia's third largest city, require girls to wear
skirts or dresses to school, which is likely similar in the country’s other
states.
Still, momentum for nondiscriminatory uniform
practices is growing. Recently, the education minister of Victoria, James
Merlino, promised to ensure female students in the state will be
allowed to have the option to wear shorts or trousers to school.
Culled from www.education.good.is
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