A Texas middle school is banning students from wearing all-black clothing because school officials say it’s associated with mental health issues.
Students at Charles Middle School in El Paso, Texas, headed back to school Monday, days after a letter from Principal Nick DeSantis outlined the school’s new dress code policy. The letter says the school is eliminating all-black clothing because it is “associated with depression and mental health issues and/or criminality.”
Norma De La Rosa, the president of El Paso Teachers Association, explained in more detail why the policy is in place and what clothing is allowed. She says teachers see a sudden change in students going from dressing with color to all black when they are depressed or stressed.
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Many parents and community members disagree with the policy, commenting online that clothing color doesn’t define a person’s mental state.
“The color of clothing has nothing to do with your ability to do anything or feel any emotion,” Alex Lucero said.
“Making students wear a different color isn’t going to magically make them a completely different person,” Alexis Contreras said.
And before anyone barges in saying “that’s not how averages work”, first of all you mean the, uh, mean – both the mean and the median are averages.
Second, intelligence probably follows a distribution that’s reasonably close to Gaussian (at least on a smaller scale) just like more or less literally all biological variables do. And I don’t mean IQ, but the general idea that cognitive performance – however the hell you define it – is going to vary from person to person and it’s going to approximately follow a Gaussian curve. The upshot of this is that the median is probably very close to the mean.
Thanks for expanding on that. Can you say something about the difference between a bell curve and a gaussian curve?
Oh there’s no difference, “bell curve” is just a more colloquial term for a normal distribution. “Normal distribution”, “Gaussian distribution / curve” and “bell curve” all mean the same thing.
Wouldn’t be math if there wasn’t 736 different names for the same thing 😆
Oh sorry, I quick read over the first sentence and missed it. Long day yesterday!