I teach middle school in addition to Taekwon-Do, and we get kids occasionally who don't shower. One, in particular, was homeless (he and his mother were living in a car) - his problem was based on lack of access, so we let him in early, and he showered in the locker room and washed his clothes in the Home Ec room - since his mother wouldn't take handouts, we also had him wash the gym loaners. Kids like those I understand.
I also understand the kids who live with parents who smoke heavily, wear the same coat every day, and don't realize how badly it reeks of smoke. If gentle hints don't work, we wash their stuff too. Those kids are usually clean in their persons - they just don't realize their outer clothes smell because they're used to it.
We also get the occasional emotionally-disturbed student who doesn't bathe for psychological reasons. I understand them too. We spend a lot of time, generally in close contact with their parents (although not always... sometimes it runs in the family) trying to change things. Sometimes it works... sometimes it doesn't.
Then there are the kids who hit puberty and don't realize what a difference it makes in their body odor, or how frequently they need to bathe now - or the need for deodorant. That's just normal middle school kids, and the other kids take care of it if the parents don't.
Then there are the kids who were never taught, or who were taught specifically not to bathe, for a variety of reasons, mostly because they don't either. I feel sorry for those kids - it's not really their fault - but they're really hard to be around after a while.
I also understand the kids who live with parents who smoke heavily, wear the same coat every day, and don't realize how badly it reeks of smoke. If gentle hints don't work, we wash their stuff too. Those kids are usually clean in their persons - they just don't realize their outer clothes smell because they're used to it.
We also get the occasional emotionally-disturbed student who doesn't bathe for psychological reasons. I understand them too. We spend a lot of time, generally in close contact with their parents (although not always... sometimes it runs in the family) trying to change things. Sometimes it works... sometimes it doesn't.
Then there are the kids who hit puberty and don't realize what a difference it makes in their body odor, or how frequently they need to bathe now - or the need for deodorant. That's just normal middle school kids, and the other kids take care of it if the parents don't.
Then there are the kids who were never taught, or who were taught specifically not to bathe, for a variety of reasons, mostly because they don't either. I feel sorry for those kids - it's not really their fault - but they're really hard to be around after a while.