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Here is an example of an article on 'School Uniforms':
Many schools around the world choose to require that students wear school uniforms, which are generally conservative, plain-colored garments of the same style for all students of a particular gender. This practice began in Europe, and has been almost universally adopted in Britain. American schools have been less enthusiastic about uniforms, but many Catholic and private schools require them, and public schools in recent years have begun to adopt uniforms as a means of decreasing gang violence through identifiable clothing. In general, uniforms are designed to keep students attention away from style and clothing and bring the classroom focus back to academics.
The classic school uniform for girls is a knee-length plaid skirt, white blouse, dark sweater or cardigan (usually with the school logo or crest emblazoned on the left breast), and black leather shoes. Some schools prefer a sailor style, in which girls wear a dark navy skirt and a dark bandanna over their shoulders, cinched at the sternum. Occasionally schools require girls to wear dresses, frequently dark (black or navy) or plaid. In recent years, some schools have eased up on gender-specific requirements, allowing girls to wear the same pants or shorts as boys if desired. School uniforms for boys traditionally involve a cap, tie, and blazer. In the past in the United Kingdom, young boys wore dark short pants with their uniform, only moving into long pants with the onset of puberty, around 13 years old. These requirements have eased, as well. American schools frequently do not require a full uniform, but instead have a dress code that generally requires boys to wear khaki, navy, or black slacks, a light colored collared shirt, and plain tennis or dress shoes.
In addition to the United Kingdom, Australia, China, Japan, Malaysia, and Singapore are among the few countries to still largely require school uniforms. Some of these are particularly distinctive. In Japanese secondary schools, for example, boys wear a quasi-military outfit, and girls wear sailor uniforms of either skirts and blouses or dresses. Individual Japanese schools may have distinctive, individual uniforms. Malaysian school uniforms are much like those of the United Kingdom (short or long pants for boys, pinafores for girls), but in secondary school boys wear olive green bottoms and girls wear turquoise dresses. Malaysian girls, generally those who are Muslim, also occasionally wear a long-sleeved white blouse over an ankle-length cotton skirt.








