Let's criticize the behavior of forcing students to keep their heads in line with school rules from three aspects.
First, legally speaking, forcing students to cut off their hair violates students' personal freedom and is illegal.
Secondly, from a moral point of view, it is the right behavior and right for students to keep their favorite hairstyles on the premise that they conform to social ethics and have no bad orientation. It is a kind of trampling on students' dignity that the school forces students to cut off their hair and keep hairstyles that they think are ugly. This behavior violates students' personal freedom, but because it has no serious impact on students, under the oppression of powerful forces represented by school administrators, most students give up their rights protection and choose to give in. This not only stifles students' personality, but also plants the seeds of obedience to power in students' hearts, which reduces students' awareness of safeguarding rights.
Thirdly, in essence, unifying students' hairstyles (which are generally considered ugly in students' aesthetics) is beneficial to the management of students in schools, which can better control students and create mass-produced learning machines. Moreover, students wear ugly hairstyles, and teachers and school leaders can keep their favorite hairstyles at will, which also reflects a class division and forcibly raises the status of school leaders and teachers. This is at the expense of students' happiness, self-esteem and human rights. (Of course, this is only an in-depth analysis of the impact of this behavior, not to say that the starting point of school leaders and teachers is like this. Most of them have a wrong understanding of this rule because of their stubborn old-fashioned thinking and persistence in shortcomings, and finally made a wrong decision. )
Therefore, I call on schools to establish a sound education system, pay attention to students' physical and mental health, abandon old and stubborn misconceptions, and respect the most basic personal freedom granted to students by law.