On this episode of RAS Reports, the Co-Directors of the Reinventing America’s Schools Project, Curtis Valentine and Tressa Pankovits, sit down to discuss Tressa’s recent op-ed in The Hill concerning Peltier et al. v. Charter Day School, the North Carolina court case about charter schools and school uniforms. This case involves a public charter school in North Carolina that does not allow girls to wear pants or shorts, only skirts and jumper-type dresses.
When asked, the school refused to change their policy and said that boys and girls should be required to dress differently to emphasize chivalry and the dress code is part of a code of conduct where women are “regarded as fragile vessels that men are supposed to take care of”. Parents decried the policy as gender discrimination and sued under the equal protection clause, Title IX and the charter school’s own contractual agreement with the state of North Carolina Board of Education. Tressa argues that this case could act as a “gateway drug” to allowing other publicly funded education to discriminate on the basis of race or gender or disability.