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Proper or Promiscuous
Tough Talk About Prom Dress Trends By Melanie VanNuys
Spring is in the air, and that can only mean one thing: prom. Millions of teenage girls across the country are leafing through magazines in search of the perfect prom dress, but are they going too far with some of their selections? More and more young girls are going from store to store trying to mimic the risqu矬ooks of Britney Spears and Jennifer Lopez, while checkbook-toting moms are going from store to store, begging their girls to do the "proper" thing and remember to cover everything that needs to be covered. But wait? Aren't we the parents? Shouldn't we be telling our daughters what they're going to wear instead of the other way around?
"It's about time we stop counting on other people to instill values into our kids," says Jason Elliott, associate pastor of Bell Chapel United Methodist Church and vice president of the Edison Local School Board in Hammondsville, Ohio.
For some schools, like Catholic schools, who already enforce a daily dress code, a dress code for prom isn't a big stretch. "Although very special, proms and formals are still school functions and all normal school rules should be enforced," says Shannon Sharesky of St. Petersburg, Fla.
But some people, mostly teenagers, argue that a dress code infringes on First Amendment Rights of freedom of expression, while others, mostly adults, believe that letting girls attend prom in "barely there" dresses simply asks for trouble. The concern is that without some type of formal dress code for the prom, the scantily-dressed girls will cause an increase in sexual activity and/or date rape.

Parents who establish the ground rules early on, hopefully won't have too many problems. Whether they admit it or not, kids need boundaries. Talk to your kids early, help them build self-respect. Prom is a special time a once-in-a-lifetime event that shouldn't be marred by a poor choice in dress.


