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WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS CASUAL ATTIRE? Above: Example of Business Professional.

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Presentation on theme: "WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS CASUAL ATTIRE? Above: Example of Business Professional."— Presentation transcript:

1 WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN BUSINESS PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS CASUAL ATTIRE?
Above: Example of Business Professional

2 Business Professional
Coordinated Suits in appropriate color (neon purple or leopard print would be inappropriate) Business Professional (suit) should be worn to court, legislature, community stakeholder meetings, etc.  (As compared to business casual attire, which should be worn when conducting the daily business of the Department.)

3 Examples of Appropriate Attire for Women
Business Casual Attire Business Professional Attire

4 Examples of Appropriate Attire for Men
Business Casual Attire Business Professional Attire

5 Business Casual Attire: Professional attire that appropriately covers the body and allows for relaxed comfort. These illustrated examples border on business professional. The two (business professional and business casual) are very similar. The difference is that business professional is a suit where the blazer and pant/skirt are the same color and same material, combined with a dress shirt (and tie for men). Business casual does not have to be the same material; does not require a blazer; and does not require a tie. No trainer will be able to offer an exhaustive list of what is appropriate professional attire and what is not. The image you present to the public, your co-workers, and the youth in our care is essential in creating and maintaining respect (as an individual and as a member of DJJDP’s workforce). One test to use would be: Would I leave my child with a person dressed like this? (Yes/No) Would I feel good about leaving my child with a person dressed like this? (Yes/No) Whether you work with children or not, the image you present to others through your dress will determine greatly the respect you receive in return.

6 What is too casual? Strapless dresses, shorts, flip flops, pullovers/zip-ups and beach wear are all inappropriate for the workplace.

7 What is Inappropriate Attire for Work?
Any clothing that has words, terms, or pictures that may be offensive to other employees is unacceptable. [Discuss “offensive”] Clothing that has the Department’s logo is encouraged. T-shirts are not acceptable unless specifically authorized for dress down days. However, knit, short-sleeved shirts with collars (Polo shirts) are acceptable. Sports team, university, and fashion brand names on clothing are generally unacceptable, except for dress down days.

8 Examples of Unprofessional and Inappropriate Attire
Midriff baring clothing Miniskirts Excessively high heeled shoes Caps (headwear) indoors Very tight clothing Clothing that reveals cleavage, your back, your chest, your stomach or your underwear is not appropriate for the workplace, even in a business casual setting.

9 Slacks, Pants, and Suit Pants
Slacks that are similar to Dockers and other makers of cotton or synthetic material pants, wool pants, flannel pants, and nice looking dress synthetic pants are acceptable. Inappropriate slacks or pants include jeans, flannel (or other material) pajama pants, sweatpants, exercise pants, short shorts, shorts, Bermuda shorts, bib overalls, leggings, and any spandex or other form-fitting pants such as bike clothing.

10 Which is appropriate? A) B) C)
Obviously, B is appropriate. A and C are not. Remember: Even B can be inappropriate if the pants are not ironed/neat in appearance, if they have paint on them, or if they are frayed/torn. Belts should be work with khaki pants and the shirt should be tucked in.

11 Skirts, Dresses, and Skirted Suits
Casual dresses and skirts, and skirts that are split at or below the knee are acceptable. Dress and skirt length should be no shorter than four inches above the knee, or a length at which you can sit comfortably in public. Short, tight skirts that ride halfway up the thigh are inappropriate for work. Mini-skirts, skorts, beach dresses, and spaghetti-strap and strapless dresses are inappropriate for the office.

12 Which is inappropriate?
B) C) C is inappropriate (too revealing in the front)

13 Shirts, Tops, Blouses, and Jackets
Casual shirts, golf shirts, dress shirts, sweaters, tops, DJJDP logo shirts, and turtlenecks are acceptable. Most suit jackets, sport jackets, or DJJDP logo Jackets are also acceptable attire for the office. Inappropriate attire includes tank tops; sweatshirts; midriff tops; shirts with potentially offensive words, terms, logos, pictures, cartoons, or slogans; halter-tops; tops with bare shoulders; and t-shirts unless worn under another blouse, shirt, jacket, or jumper.

14 DJJDP Logo Shirt DJJDP logo shirts are appropriate for business casual dress.

15 Which is appropriate? A) B) C) D) F) E) A is backless B is see-through
C is a T-Shirt D is APPROPRIATE E is strapless and too tight F is a tank top

16 Shoes and Footwear Loafers, boots, flats, dress heels, and leather deck shoes are acceptable. Wearing no stockings is acceptable if the look is appropriate to the outfit. Conservative athletic shoes and sneakers may be appropriate for some job functions (i.e., umpiring recreational activities) or for health reasons, but are generally inappropriate. Flashy athletic shoes, thongs/flip-flops, and slippers are not acceptable in the office. Closed toe and closed heel shoes are required in the vocational and recreation areas of facilities.

17 Which is inappropriate?
B) A) C) A is appropriate B is fine for those not working in a vocational or recreation area C is inappropriate. Slippers are not allowed.

18 Which is appropriate? B) A) C) D)
A: The height of this shoe is a safety hazard. It would be difficult to perform a direct care duty with these shoes on all day. B: Again, height is a safety hazard and shiny leather/ pleather is unprofessional. C: IS APPROPRIATE. D: Flip-flops/thongs are not appropriate for the workplace. D)

19 SNEAKERS: What is appropriate (for those authorized by duty/assignment to wear athletic shoes)
Appropriate, conservative athletic shoe Inappropriate, flashy athletic shoe Classic athletic shoes are appropriate. Low volume colors are appropriate. Loud colors (florescent) and prints on shoes are distracting. High heeled sneakers are inappropriate. These shoes defeat the purpose of wearing athletic shoes: function. It is important to remember that just because an article of clothing, jewelry, or footwear costs a lot of money does not mean it is appropriate for the workplace.

20 Jewelry, Makeup, Perfume, and Cologne: Should be in good taste, with no visible body piercing other than pierced ears. Fingernail Length: If the employee’s fingernail length would injure a juvenile/staff member if the employee is required to restrain the juvenile, then that employee’s fingernail length is inappropriate. Hats and Head Covering: Hats and caps are not appropriate in the office. Head Covers that are required for religious purposes or to honor cultural tradition are allowed. Typically the standard for fingernail length is no longer than the tip of the finger. This standard only applies to staff authorized through training to restrain a juvenile. However, if your fingernail length interferes with the effectiveness and efficiency of your job performance – how well and how quickly you can perform those duties (i.e., typing, washing clothes, etc…), then you should trim your nails to the standard length (not to extend beyond the finger tip). Also, if you or your supervisor believe the length of your nails might present a safety risk (such as: cause injury during a physical confrontation), you are required to trim them to the standard length. During RCDT training, no staff member may wear false nails or have fingernail length extend beyond the tip of each finger.

21 Excessive make-up should be avoided.
Hair rollers, sometimes called curlers, are prohibited at work.

22 There is a time and a place for all attire
There is a time and a place for all attire. Clothing that works well for the beach, yard work, dance clubs, trips to the mall, exercise sessions, and sports contests may not be appropriate for a professional appearance at work. While the jacket this woman is wearing may be appropriate: jeans, sneakers, and mid-drift showing shirts are not. Also be mindful that hoop earrings could be a safety hazard to you in a facility. Please remember that the Department does not reimburse staff for lost, stolen, or damaged jewelry.

23 The Secretary, Chief of Staff, a Deputy or Assistant Secretary/Director, Area Administrator, your Facility Director/Assistant Facility Director or Chief Court Counselor, or the Director of Staff Development may authorize dress down days for the office/facility/special events, or for a particular employee of group of employees based on job duties (i.e., authorize white T-shirts for moving days or for maintenance staff). On these days, jeans and a more casual approach to dressing, although never potentially offensive to others, is allowed. A common example of a dress down day is the week of Restraint, Control, and Defense Techniques in Basic Training. During that week, the Director of Staff Development authorizes the wearing of sweat shirts and sweat pants. However, these sweats must not be tight, and must sufficiently cover the body. Employees shall never be directed to wear revealing or tight clothing.

24 Violations of Dress Code
If an employee’s supervisor determines that an employee’s clothing fails to meet these standards, the supervisor shall ask the employee not to wear the inappropriate item to work again. The supervisor may send the employee home to change clothes and shall issue a verbal warning for the first offense. All other policies about personal time use will apply. Progressive disciplinary action will be taken for further dress code violations. HR should be contacted as the Facility Director/Chief Court Counselor deems appropriate. If you have to ask yourself, “I wonder if this would be appropriate for work?”, then it probably isn’t appropriate for work. You are encouraged to seek guidance from your supervisor when you have questions about what is appropriate to wear to work.


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