In the first article “School Uniforms: Pros and Cons” written by Ann Svensen. She writes about pros and cons of school uniforms. She introduces us to an informal statistic, which has showed, that school crime has dropped very much especially in California’s Long Beach Unified School District after the urban made a mandatory uniform policy. She also writes about education experts who say that the children lose their possibility to express themselves freely because they are not allowed to choose what clothes they are wearing. In the article “School uniform improves pupils’ behaviour both in and out of school”, written by Laura Clark, a journalist at the British newspaper, is arguing that school uniforms are the pivotal point improving …show more content…
But you can still easily think, that it is just her view on the topic, and all children think it is the right thing to do. Through the text Suzanne Moore questions whether or not school uniforms are the way to go: “Did this uniform instill in me a sense of oneness with my school… Did it solve the class issue?” (p. 6, l. 36-39). The questions make the reader think about the pros and cons of school uniforms. But at the same time, it makes the reader think that she can’t answer the question herself given the fact she asks it. This appears as a lack of argumentation.
In text 2, the article “School uniform improves pupils’ behaviour in and outside of school”, Laura Clark tells in favour of school uniforms given the fact she only writes about the cons. She writes that school uniforms prevent bullying, making children behaving better outside the school, increasing the concentration in class and the children not needing to worry about how classmates are thinking about their clothes. Pupils are more deliberate of their way of acting in