School uniforms in Myanmar

School uniforms in Myanmar, also called the White-Green (Burmese: အဖြူအစိမ်း) is named after the colour code of uniforms of both public school students and teachers in Myanmar. The uniform rule is mandatory,[1] mandated in 1966.[2] Non-state schools and private schools are excluded from the mandate and can have their own uniforms.

The White-Green consists of a white yinbon eingyi (with a green scarf for formal occasions) and green htamein for girls, and a white eingyi (dress shirt) (with taikpon eingyi for formal occasions) and green pahso for boys. It was originally the uniform of Myoma Co-Educational National High School Rangoon.[3]

Students at a Basic Education School (public school) in Myanmar.

History

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Before 1966, each school in Burma had its own uniform.

 
Boys in White-Green uniform going to school.

In 1965 and 1966, all non-state schools (private, missionary, national, vernacular, special, etc.) were nationalized[4] and became State Schools. On 14 February 1966, the Revolutionary Government Educational Department mandated all students and teachers in all of Burma to wear the same uniforms.[2]

Public school uniforms (White-Green)

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The White-Green Uniforms
Type Wearer(s) Male Female
Primary school students Students: Kindergarten, 1st Standard, 2nd Standard, 3rd Standard, 4th Standard. Top: white dress shirt
Bottom: green trousers
Footwear: shoes or male Burmese sandals
Top: white blouse
Bottom: green skirt with or without green pants
(There are many variants with mixed designs)
Footwear: shoes or female Burmese sandals
Both students and teachers Students: 5th Standard, 6th Standard, 7th Standard, 8th Standard, 9th Standard, 10th Standard.
Teachers: All.
Top: white dress shirt
Bottom: green pahso
Footwear: male Burmese sandals
Top: white Burmese blouse
Bottom: green htamein.
Footwear: female Burmese sandals
Typical for teachers


Formal for students

Students: All (only for formal wear).
Teachers: All
Top: white dress shirt with mandarin collar and (usually white) taikpon
Bottom: green pahso
Footwear: male Burmese sandals
Top: white Burmese blouse and green scarf
Bottom: green htamein
Footwear: female Burmese sandals

Variations

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White dress shirt

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Collar:

  • With an English collar
  • With a mandarin collar (‹See Tfd›ကော်လံကတုံး)

Sleeves:

  • With short sleeves (‹See Tfd›လက်တို lit.'short hand')
  • With long sleeves (‹See Tfd›လက်ရှည် lit.'long hand')

White Burmese blouse

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Opening:

  • Buttoned at the front (‹See Tfd›ရင်စေ့ lit.'chest closing')
  • Buttoned at the side (‹See Tfd›ရင်ဖုံး lit.'chest covering')

Sleeves:

  • With short sleeves (‹See Tfd›လက်တို lit.'short hand')
  • With three-quarter sleeves (‹See Tfd›လက်စက lit.'middle-sized hand')
  • With long sleeves (‹See Tfd›လက်ရှည် lit.'long hand')

Green colour

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These are the common variations of green used in school uniforms:

       

Primary school girls' uniform design

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Primary school student stunt with a special designed uniform in modern day.

The uniform for primary school girls has many variations in designs and styles.

Taikpon

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Common colour variations for taikpon used in schools include:
• White  
• Pinni(‹See Tfd›ပင်နီ)      
• Latte  

Burmese sandals

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Burmese sandals (lit.'clip footwear') are the most popular footwear in combination with traditional White-Green uniforms. There are two variations: lacquer and velvet.

Lacquered sandals are usually either black or brown. Velvet sandals vary in colours.

Embroidered patches and pin badges

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Embroidered patches

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Almost all public schools (except TTC Yangon) require that the school's name and badge be embroidered or sewn into the uniform, either on both sleeves or on the left side of the chest (above the pocket for the shirts). Usually, the name of the grades or standards and the class or section are also embroidered or sewn into the uniform on the left side of the chest. Embroidered patches are only on the students' uniforms, not the teachers'.

Pin badges

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An exception is the Practising High School Kamayut (TTC), which does not use embroidered patches. TTC students wear pin badges.[citation needed]

In all public schools, teachers wear a pin badge of the school's badge together with the school's name. Often, they also wear a pin of appointment.[citation needed]

Uniforms of public universities and colleges

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Not all universities require uniforms. Uniform rules vary according to each university or college. Many do not require uniforms.

Universities, institutes, and colleges that require uniforms

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Universities of Education (UOEs), Education Colleges (ECs), Education Degree Colleges (EDCs), and Universities for Development of National Races (UDNR) use the traditional White-Green uniforms. Students at these institutions are pre-service trainees to become school teachers.[5]

Universities of Nursing (UONs) use the White-Red[6] uniform of Nursing in Myanmar.

The students' uniforms at Technological Universities (TUs) are white shirts and blue-black pahso for boys, and white blouses and blue-black htamein for girls.[7] General Technological Institutes (GTIs) used the same uniforms before 2016, after which their uniform became white shirts and black-blue trousers for both genders.[7]

The uniforms for students of the Universities of Computer Studies (UCSs) are white shirts and blue pahso for boys, and white Burmese blouses and blue htamein for girls.[8]

The uniforms of Myanmar Aerospace Engineering University (MAEU) are white shirts with sky blue neckties and stylepants for boys, and white shirts and khaki skirts for girls.[9]

Students at Myanmar Maritime University (MMU) and Myanmar Mercantile Marine College (MMMC) wear the uniforms of Myanmar seafarers, in addition to a necktie.

Universities and colleges that do not require uniforms

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In 2004, a dress code was imposed for university and college students to wear a white shirt/blouse and longyi (pahso/htamein). T-shirts and jeans were banned.[10] This dress code was later loosened.[citation needed]

Uniforms of private schools, universities, and colleges

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in 1965 and 1966, the socialist Revolutionary Government nationalized all private schools,[4] which once had their own uniforms. The government made the White-Green the uniform of all schools starting in 1966.[2]

The Ministry of Education of the SPDC Government allowed to open private schools starting in 2010.[11] The new private schools can use either the White-Green uniform or any uniform of their own style.

References

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  1. ^ "Myanmar Times & Business Reviews". Archived from the original on 19 May 2006. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  2. ^ a b c စံပြဗဟုသုတဘဏ် [Standard Knowledge Bank] (in Burmese). Vol. 1. စံပြစာတည်းအဖွဲ့. 1970. p. 42.
  3. ^ ဒေါက်တာသန်းဦး (2020). "နှစ်တစ်ရာပြည့် မြို့မအမျိုးသားကျောင်း" [One Hundred Years Old Myoma National School]. Myanmar Digital News (in Burmese).
  4. ^ a b Thet Ko Ko (2020). "The Day Myanmar's Socialist Govt Nationalized Missionary and Private Schools".
  5. ^ Joanna Washington (2017). "အရည်အချင်းပြည့် ဆရာ ဆရာမများ မွေးထုတ်လိုလျှင်" [If want to cultivate skillful teachers]. Myanmar Times.
  6. ^ Ei Shwe Phyu (2017). "A review of education sector in 2017". Myanmar Times (in Burmese).
  7. ^ a b TU Arkar Min; နောင်ခန့်(မော်လမြိုင်) (2016). "မော်လမြိုင် GTI ကျောင်းတွင် ကျောင်းဝတ်စုံပြောင်းလဲ သတ်မှတ်လိုက်သော်လည်း မော်လမြိုင် TU တွင် အစီစဉ်မရှိသေးဟုဆို" [Despite Mawlamyein GTI changed its uniform, Mawlamyein TU don't have any plan]. Thanlwintimes (in Burmese).
  8. ^ "UCSMTLA IT CAMP 2018". University of Computer Studies, Meiktila (in Burmese). University of Computer Studies, Meiktila. 2018.
  9. ^ မင်းထက်ပြည့်စုံ (2018). "လေကြောင်းနှင့်အာကာသ တက္ကသိုလ်(Myanmar Aerospace Engineering University)". ပန်းတိုင် map (in Burmese).
  10. ^ "New Dress Code for Burmese Students". The Irrawaddy. 2004.
  11. ^ Ahunt Phone Myat (2009). "Burma to open private schools and hospitals".