Sunday 18 September 2022 04:56 PM Parents accuse school of turning into a 'military' camp after uniform crackdown trends now

Sunday 18 September 2022 04:56 PM Parents accuse school of turning into a 'military' camp after uniform crackdown trends now
Sunday 18 September 2022 04:56 PM Parents accuse school of turning into a 'military' camp after uniform crackdown trends now

Sunday 18 September 2022 04:56 PM Parents accuse school of turning into a 'military' camp after uniform crackdown trends now

Parents accuse school of turning into a 'military' camp after uniform crackdown with a hall-full of students put in isolation for breaking strict rules Moorside High School in Stoke-on-Trent introduced strict new uniform rules The crackdown has targeted make-up, shoes and certain materials in skirts Children have been put in 'isolation rooms', meaning they have missed lessons  Parent Tracey Turley said the rules on shoes had given her daughter blisters  

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A high school in Stoke-on-Trent has been accused of turning into a 'military camp' as new uniform rules meant pupils were put into isolation rooms and missed lessons. 

The crackdown at Moorside High School in Werrington has targeted make up, banned skirts being made of the wrong material and focuses on footwear - saying shoes must not look like trainers or have embellishments.

Parents said their children are being treated like 'caged animals' and that they cannot learn in such a strict environment. 

Children have spent their school hours sitting in a waiting room and missing classes as they have waited for their parents to be called. 

Headteacher Darryn Robinson said the uniform changes were part of 'raising standards within the school' and were to create 'a source of pride'.  

Moorside High School in Werrington, Stoke-on-Trent, has been accused of turning into a 'military camp' after a uniform crackdown

Moorside High School in Werrington, Stoke-on-Trent, has been accused of turning into a 'military camp' after a uniform crackdown

A diagram of banned shoes and skirts was given out to parents before the start of the new school year. 

Mother Tracey Turley said the footwear rules meant her daughter had to wear a £10 pair of shoes from Primark, which gave her blisters and meant she was in 'agony'. 

But her child, who only had her first day of school on Wednesday, September 7, still had to spend time in isolation because the material of her skirt didn't fit requirements - even though she had already missed out on

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