I went back to read the essay by the teenager. It brought me back to when I was involved in the school system by employment and also fatherhood.
I remember the girls wearing provocative dress, to be provocative. Some of it a distraction from anything, on some young healthy bodies this is nature and their intent. They liked the attention. They felt sexy, worthy of attention. That was obvious. I had a difficult time keeping my facade of disinterest, then they would open their mouths and I'd realize that these were actually children. They were also telling the other kids that they were more liberated from their youthful position, more grown up, in their own way.
There was the other extreme young women dress in bland and black and baggy pants and t-shirts. These were after some other kind of recognition. They seemed to me that there was often body shame involved.
Junior high are kids just learning to find an identity. They see that dressing the part is the part. Then they find individuality and know more of the world. They realize that it take more than dressing up as to be as.
In high school, it is often more self expression and less peer influence, or trying to express sophistication.
Then the teachers and especially administrators a would step in wanting to level all to one boring standard, uniformity and desexualization of people of an age more obsessed with sex than the rest of us. To me they were throwing the baby out with the bathwater. Destroying growth by trimming and being orderly. Well, that's what administrators do. They want order, not growth, individuality, self expression, etc. It is 1984 tactics.
When a group of administrators, P.E. teachers, and catholic school graduates tried to impose uniforms on my son, I went to war. My girlfriend of the time had won in court the right to wear pants. She was adamant. Together we stopped the move. I was to be the token person in the group to make it look good. They didn't expect lawsuits, letters to their bosses, information and studies two inches high, and informed passionate people.
Same ol' stuff. We are here to learn and it is a distraction. Dress for success. They got some changes to the code, hinging on these silly issues about exposed shoulders and the width of the straps. But self expression and experimentation is still happening at that school.
Still, naked would make it better, but people need to express themselves. People need to be able to opt out.
Jbee