For 17-year-old Lindsey Stocker, being made to stand in front of her classmates and publicly lower her arms to see if her shorts were below her fingertips was the ultimate humiliation.
She had simply worn the shorts because the day was hot.
What she didn’t expect, was her shorts would become the start of a campaign that would make news right across the world.
Lindsay – in year 11 at Beaconfield High in Montreal, Canada — was in violation of the school’s dress code.
Teachers applied a ‘finger-length test,’ where students are asked to stand up with their arms at their sides. If the girls’ fingers hang past the length of their shorts, the shorts are considered too short for school.
Lindsay’s shorts failed the criteria.
She says that what upset her was that many of the rules in the dress code appear to specifically target girls.
Rules include no short shorts no halter tops/tube tops/bikini tops, no “excessive cleavage, no headgear of any kind either — except for religious purposes”.
Frustrated that the school officials would not listen to her argument for wearing the shorts Lindsay printed off a series of posters and hung them around the school.
The posters read: “Don’t humiliate her because she is wearing shorts. It’s hot outside. Instead of shaming girls for their bodies, teach boys that girls are not sexual objects.”