cereta: antique pen on paper (Anjesa-pen and paper)
Lucy ([personal profile] cereta) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2018-05-17 09:28 am

Annie's Mailbox: Tattoos in the Worlplace

Dear Annie: The principal of the school where I teach has some big tattoos on her neck. She says they are Chinese symbols for "good fortune." I think they look trashy. I don't mind tattoos, but I don't think large markings on one's hands and neck are appropriate for school. They don't convey authority, and I have a hard time taking orders from her.

The last time she entered my classroom, she pointed to a poster listing class rules and said she didn't like that it had torn edges. I gently said, "I'm sorry, but I've been preoccupied with my students' reading skills, math and grammar, so the torn edges will have to wait a bit." She left the classroom looking uncomfortable.

The school security guards also have tattoos and not simply the names of their girlfriends or boyfriends. They picture playing cards, dice and other motifs that I consider more appropriate for a biker bar. During the last parent-teacher conference, one parent exclaimed, "Did you recruit the security guards from the county jail?"

Why is it acceptable for teachers, court officers and other professionals to tattoo their hands and necks when it makes them look like street thugs? How do they expect kids to listen to them when they look like that? I warn my older pupils that visible tattoos may bar them from certain jobs. Most of them take my advice. The ones who don't are harder to place for summer internships. -- N.Y.

Dear N.Y.: The proliferation of tattoos on the faces, hands and necks of professional sports players and TV reality stars makes this type of artwork seem more mainstream and acceptable. But just as there are dress codes for businesses, there are also dress codes for schools. If the students are not permitted to show such visible tattoos, neither should the administration and security personnel, who presumably set the example. If you believe this undermines the principal's authority, you can register a complaint with the school board.
fox: my left eye.  "ceci n'est pas une fox." (Default)

[personal profile] fox 2018-05-17 02:39 pm (UTC)(link)
If the students are not permitted to show such visible tattoos, neither should the administration and security personnel, who presumably set the example.

I'd wager there are a fair few things school employees are allowed to do that students are not. When I was in high school, the principal once made an announcement in assembly about how no, really, we were not allowed to have food and drinks in the hallways. "Some of you may point out that you routinely see your teachers walking in the hallways with cups of coffee," he said, "and point out that this seems to violate the rule against your walking in the hallways with cans of soda. And you're absolutely right. This is what is known as a double standard. Get used to it."

I don't care for the hyperjudgmental tone in this employee's letter. Are these colleagues with tattoos doing their jobs (as she is doing hers rather than focusing on the torn edges of the poster)? Then maybe she could shut the FUCK up and keep her eyes on her own paper? Just a thought.