| Literature DB >> 34692181 |
Abstract
This study uses a public health lens to review evidence about the impacts of wearing a school uniform on students' health and educational outcomes. It also reviews the underlying rationales for school uniform use, exploring historical reasons for uniform use, as well as how questions of equity, human rights, and the status of children as a vulnerable group are played out in debates over school uniforms. The literature identified indicates that uniforms have no direct impact on academic performance, yet directly impact physical and psychological health. Girls, ethnic and religious minorities, gender-diverse students and poorer students suffer harm disproportionately from poorly designed uniform policies and garments that do not suit their physical and socio-cultural needs. Paradoxically, for some students, uniform creates a barrier to education that it was originally instituted to remedy. The article shows that public health offers a new perspective on and contribution to debates and rationales for school uniform use. This review lays out the research landscape on school uniform and highlights areas for further research.Entities:
Keywords: education impacts, human rights; equity; health impacts; public health; school uniform
Year: 2021 PMID: 34692181 PMCID: PMC8386814 DOI: 10.3389/phrs.2021.1604212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Rev ISSN: 0301-0422
Database searches October 2020.
| Host | Databases | Limits | Search terms | Number of articles |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ovid | Ovid medline R (ALL) EBM reviews (cochrane database of systematic reviews). ERIC. Philosopher’s index. APA psychinfo | 2000-Present (Oct 2020) | School uniform | 83 |
| School uniform AND education | 12 | |||
| School uniform AND health | 36 | |||
| Scopus | In article, abstract or keywords. 2000- present. Article or review | School uniform | 138 | |
| School uniform AND health | 20 | |||
| School uniform AND education | 38 | |||
| Web of science | All databases | English. Article. 2000–2020 | School uniform | 45 |
| School uniform AND health | 11 | |||
| School uniform AND education | 0 | |||
| EBSCO online database collection | Academic search complete. Australia/NZ references center. Education resource complex. Psychology and behavioral sciences complete | 2000-Oct 2020; all; abstract. All. Academic journal; English, abstract. Abstract | School uniform | 2 |
| School uniform AND health | 6 | |||
| School uniform AND education | 0 | |||
| Total found | 304 |
Each database has different possible limits and the platform generates one result.
FIGURE 1Organization of evidence about uniform use.
Uniform’s positive, neutral, and negative impacts on education and health outcomes.
| Domain | Positive impact | Neutral impact | Negative impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Educational outcome | Improves classroom management; faster settling to task; reduced distractions | No clear impact on academic achievement | Detracts/distracts from teacher–student rapport; Reduces creativity in population; An extra barrier to socialisation for newcomers/minorities |
| Health outcomes: Physical | Insecticide-treated uniform can provide protection against dengue; Well-designed uniform can protect skin from sun damage; Health and safety can be enhanced in uniform design | Poor uniform policy a barrier to incidental and curriculum based exercise; Poor uniform design a barrier for incidental exercise, especially for girls; Sun protection not considered in policy or garment design; Physical comfort/health not prioritised in design; Health and safety can be misapplied to ban certain non-uniform items | |
| Health outcomes: Psychosocial | Unisex and inclusive design can increase girls’ and overweight students’ confidence to participate in sport; Self-esteem promoted (if student can afford full and correct uniform); Removes competitive dressing pressure; Decreases bullying | Non-inclusive design can reduce girls’ and overweight students’ confidence to participate in sport; Bullying and social exclusion for following uniform rules; Inflexible uniform policy harmful for gender-diverse students |
Implicit and explicit rationales for uniform use.
| Rationales for use from literature |
|---|
| School culture/operational management |
| Symbolic of school culture; encourages pride |
| Affiliation supported by sameness |
| Delineates social hierarchies (in/out groups) |
| Improves school security/perception of school security |
| Removes socio-economic differences between students |
| School’s reputation/impression management |
| Signals school’s place in education market |
| Socio-political context |
| Social mores—garment design and rules change over time reflecting societal change |
| Historically as a transfer of values—especially in post-colonial anglosphere |
| Currently auxiliary to achieving wider public policy goals: Cultural revitalization, introduction of sharia laws, enhancing feeling of citizenship/patriotism |
| Instrumental—tool to equalize social class in school |
| Encourages social integration and cohesion |
| Human rights expressed in context |
| Equality |
| Freedom of religion |
| Minorities bear burden of sameness and make more accommodation to uniform |
| Uniform policies sometimes do not/cannot legally accommodate difference |
| Gender equality |
| Restrictions based on historical norms |
| Girls’ movement restricted by design |
| Girls’ uniform garments more expensive than boys’ |
| Sex vs. gender: Gender non-binary students discriminated against by uniform policy |
| Freedom of expression |
| Hampers expression vs. there being many other outlets for student expression/students can rebel in safe confines of uniform |
| Right to expression linked to age and stage of development |
| Provides teachable moments about social attire, appropriateness |
| Fosters suspicion of other/difference |
| Reduces ability to discuss difference |
| Children as a vulnerable group |
| Unclear what aspects of childhood/children need protecting according to age and developmental stage |
| Unclear whether uniform should be imposed when it does not positively affect academic achievement |
| Duty to consider children’s/youth voices in garment design and uniform policy according to age and stage of development |