Miranda Larkin, 15, was told by Oakleaf High School in Jacksonville, Florida, to put on a "shame suit" consisting of baggy red tracksuit pants and an oversized fluorescent tee with the words "dress code violation" across them after she wore a skirt shorter than school policy.

THIS outfit is offensive to a high school in Kentucky.

Stephanie Hughes was sent home from Woodford County High School in the city of Versailles when she wore a crème tank top with a white cardigan as it left her collarbone on show.

Hughes’s mother Stacie Dunn posted the “offending” outfit on her Facebook page after being told her daughter’s clothes would distract the males in her classes.

“I had to come to the school because according to her school principal what she is wearing is out of dress code and inappropriate for school,” Dunn wrote.

“When I got there I found a group of female students standing in the office due to being out of dress code also. This is ridiculous! Woodford County High School and the principle (sic) have been enforcing a dress code where as girls can not show even there (sic) collar bones because it may distract their male class mates. This is ridiculous! Parents are being called away from their important jobs and students are missing important class time because they are showing their collarbones! Something needs to change!”

COMMENT BELOW: Is this appropriate policy?

Steph’s mum then bought her a scarf to cover the collarbone but she was sent home again.

“So steph got sent home from school for giving the principal an attitude when he told her the scarf I brought her to cover up with was still inappropriate and she needed to fix it! What did he want her to tie it like a noose around her neck!!!!”

The school’s dress code was highlighted earlier this year when Maggie Sunseri, now a junior at Woodford, produced a documentary called Shame: A Documentary on School Dress Code. “Telling young girls to cover up because it creates a distracting learning environment for boys is the entirely wrong message to send,” Maggie told the Herald-Leader.

Woodford County High School’s council has held a meeting with the students’ parents to discuss the decade-old dress policy. They will meet again on September 21 and if the dress code is changed it will not come into force until January next year.

“This needs to actually change,” Sunseri said. “Not just be an issue but actually change.”