School was supposed to be about learning, but sometimes, the rules felt like they came straight out of a comedy show. From bizarre clothing bans to strange hallway policies, here are eight weird school rules we all had to follow—for some reason.
1. No running in the hallways, but speed-walking was fine
Running was strictly forbidden, but if you moved at an awkwardly fast shuffle, teachers didn’t seem to mind. The result? Hallways full of students doing the strangest power-walks to avoid being late.
2. Asking for permission to use the bathroom
Nothing made you feel less like an independent human than having to ask if you could use the bathroom—sometimes only to be told, “No, you should have gone at recess.” As if our bladders ran on a schedule.
3. Not being allowed to wear certain colors
Some schools banned specific colors because they were “gang-related,” even if you were just wearing a red T-shirt from a family vacation. Did it make sense? Not really.
4. No backpacks in the classroom
Apparently, backpacks were considered a distraction, a hazard, or just too much freedom. Instead, we had to carry everything in our arms, creating a high-risk game of “how many books can I balance before I drop them?”
5. Zero-tolerance policies on literally everything
Accidentally bring a butter knife in your lunchbox? Suspended. Repeat a joke you heard on TV? Detention. Some schools took zero tolerance to the extreme, punishing even the most innocent slip-ups.
6. Not being allowed to wear hats indoors
For some reason, wearing a hat indoors was seen as the ultimate sign of disrespect. But… why? We still don’t know.
7. Silence during lunch for no reason
Some schools actually enforced a silent lunch rule, as if eating in complete silence made anyone feel more disciplined instead of just awkward.
8. Only being allowed to use certain fonts on assignments
Comic Sans? Absolutely not. Times New Roman? Acceptable. Some schools were oddly strict about fonts, as if the right typeface could make or break our academic future.
What was the weirdest rule your school had?