Do Japanese schools allow girls to wear pants?
In Setagaya, new female junior high school students can wear pants as soon as their schools make the appropriate preparations. In April 2015, the education ministry asked schools throughout Japan to show consideration for their students, including by allowing them to wear the uniforms of their self-identified genders.
These uniforms are based on Meiji-period formal military dress, themselves modeled on European-style naval uniforms. The sailor outfits replace the undivided hakama (known as andon bakama (行灯袴)) designed by Utako Shimoda between 1920 and 1930.
In the majority of elementary schools, students are not required to wear a uniform to school. Where they are required, many boys wear white shirts, short trousers, and caps. Young boys often dress more formally in their class pictures than they do other days of the school year.
There is a fact in the fashion of Japan that wearing a miniskirt is a kind of privilege for high school students. This is not an actual individual right (of course). However, many people are conscious that high school students like wearing miniskirts in terms of fashion.
You don't need dresses or skirts unless you feel more comfortable in them. If you are traveling to Japan on business then a formal, conservative trouser or knee-length skirt-suit worn with tights in dark colors works well, but do avoid an all-black look – this is associated with funerals.
In the average anime, students wear some version of a school uniform. Most Japanese schools do have a uniform for students. But, real school uniforms are far less fashion-forward than what you see in anime. You won't find any student sporting pastel skirts or garish colored plaid pants.
All Tokyo public high schools abolish rules forcing students to dye non-black hair, underwear color regs. Popular boys' hairstyle also removed from banned list. On Thursday the members of the Tokyo Metropolitan Board of Education gathered for a regularly scheduled meeting.
Loud slurping may be rude in the U.S., but in Japan it is considered rude not to slurp. Oh, and don't forget to use your chopsticks to get the noodles into your mouth. It is also acceptable to bring your small bowl of food close to your face to eat, instead of bending your head down to get closer to your plate.
In addition to removing the rules on hair and underwear colors, schools will also now allow a wider range of hairstyles, such as a two-block haircut—short on the sides and back while long on top.
Re: Regarding wearing yukata
Normally, females don't wear (at least not Western style) bras under yukata or any kind of Japanese kimono. And properly, females are supposed to wear a koshimaki (in which you wrap around your bottom) and a hada-juban (in which you wear on your top) even when wearing yukata.
Can you wear a hoodie in Japanese school?
Nope. The school's dress code allows for only the addition of a specific sweater or cardigan designated by the school as part of the uniform. Want to wear a heavier sweatshirt, or maybe a high-necked undershirt to keep the draft off your neck? Sorry, not allowed.
In some high schools in Japan, the dress code may be strict, with teachers checking students' uniforms meticulously, even nail and hair length! Also, don't wear makeup, nail polish, or piercings at school; keep those for when you let your hair down on the weekend.
The "original" Gyaru is pretty much extinct, as most of the brands don't exist anymore, so it is pretty hard to find brand items. You can always search for a certain aesthetic, for example, “flower skirt” to find items that could be considered gyaru.
"Gyaru" refers to a Japanese fashion and social sub-culture of girls who follow a certain style of clothes, hair, makeup, and activities. They're kind of the valley-girls of Japan, some would say. Within the gyaru culture, there are countless sub-categories.
It seems, with the passing of every academic year, school uniform rules are becoming more and more relaxed. And, as a result, school skirts are becoming shorter and shorter in order to follow high street and catwalk fashions.
In March 2019, U.S. District Judge Malcolm Howard found that the school's dress code, which banned its female students from wearing shorts or pants, was unconstitutional, violating the students' rights to equal protection under the law.
But since the girls' uniforms leave their legs exposed, the no-tights rule is only enforceable for female students, and so effectively they're the only ones being restricted from keeping their legs as warm as they like.