Connect with us

General

Are all haircuts proper? Parents and teachers react

Published




Parents, teachers and school operators, on Thursday, decried improper trending haircuts among male and female school children.

Some of the parents and teachers said, on Friday, in Lagos that the phenomenon, which they described as “indecent”, was gradually becoming a norm in schools in Lagos.

According to some of them, the relevant authorities must place a check against certain indecent acts in schools, which should include hair cut inspection on male and female children.

The Parents Teachers Association (PTA) chairperson of Holy family school, Ikotun, Mrs Orji blamed the parents who allow their children to dictate the kind of haircut styles.

“Our parents should check what our children want for themselves, they may love to move with the trends without knowing the moral status of their actions.

“The schools also must stand their ground to check these so called trending fashions that come up intermittently because they tell a lot on the image of the school,” said Orji.

She said:

“when we discovered a trending haircut called, Galax on our children, we immediately sent out a notice to the children and parents, asking them to have their children’s hair cut again”.

Mr Temidayo Omodelabu, a businessman in Surulere said that people have negative impressions on those who carry such haircuts.

“When you see those students who have these so-called trending haircuts, the first expression you get is that they are not from responsible homes.

The father of three children said, “religiously, it is wrong.

A housewife, Mrs Towo Adeleke, said that she sent her son back to the salon to re-cut his hair when she noticed a strange style.

“I did allow him to sit down. I immediately sent him back to the barbing salon to cut the style he said was called Obama.

“I blame mothers who see these things and don’t act,” she said.

She added that such “strange haircuts” make these children look irresponsible and mostly portray them as ex-convicts in the name of fashion.

Mr Arasiu Salaius, a parent, in Surulere, said:

“My son cannot be carrying those kinds of strange haircuts because I look at those people who have it as being a nuisance in the society.

“A good parent will not allow their children to have those types of haircuts,” he said, adding that it was cultists that go on such strange haircuts.

He advised school governments to set laws against those caught with such kinds of haircut in schools, so that they would be punished and that would serve as a deterrent to others.

Similarly, Ayomide Abisoye, a student of Adebola Baptist school, Shitta, in Surulere, said that those caught in their school were sent home by the teachers and asked not to return until they have had a decent haircut.

Another student at Elite school in Ijegamo, Mary Okolie said that fashion is more in public than private schools who reacted immediately they noticed it on any child.

“In public schools, you’ll find funny strange haircuts because they are too many to be checked, but in my school, you cannot even try it because the teachers will send you back from the gate,” she said.

Meanwhile, an 18-year-old who owns Bablospenzeer Haircut saloon in Iyana Ipaja, Lagos, Ayomide Bello said: “our business is to respond to what our customers want.

“Some of the trending styles popularly demanded are low skin fade with brushed up fringe, low bald fade with line up and buzz cut, comb over with part and high fade.

“Others include; mild fade with hard part, long slicked back undercut with neared, high bald fade with spiky hair and design, Obama, Galax and undercut fade with spiky design’,, he said.

(NAN)

Advertisement
Comments



Trending