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Published 14:37 20 Mar 2021 GMT
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"It led to competition for the latest designer clothes, the latest sweatshirts, t-shirts, trainers or whatever it was," he said.
"This created great upset amongst the pupils and those who couldn't afford the latest 'gear', as they called it, often were name-called and bullied."
Bearing all this in mind, the bill's intention to make school uniform more affordable, with school branded garments only required on rare occasions, would make a lot of sense. Baroness Elizabeth Berridge said: "The guidance will also provide information to schools about ways they can achieve the benefits of a branded item while also keeping costs to parents low... This might involve the use of sew-on or iron-on logos, amongst other approaches."Tube strikes: Union rep ‘complained iPads being supplied by TfL too small to watch Netflix’
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