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High school graduates take "selfies" on a mobile phone after performing a mass dance during a graduation parade in Ljubljana May 23, 2014. More than 4,000 graduates participated in the dance in Ljubljana and other Slovenian towns on Friday, according to organisers. REUTERS/Srdjan Zivulovic (SLOVENIA - Tags: EDUCATION SOCIETY)

A Canadian high school in Labrador City, Newfoundland, sent home some 30 students after they went to school wearing sleeveless shirts and with exposed bra straps. Menihek High School authorities said their attire was inappropriate and violated the school's dress code.

The boys reported to school wearing sleeveless shirts, while the girls wore tanks revealing their bra straps.

The students were told their attire distracts the school community.

Emily Connors, one of the students sent home, said she chose that particular outfit that day because it was an unseasonably warm day and she wanted to be comfortable at school.

"This is the first time I've ever been sent home from school," Connors said. "We were sent home because of our bra straps, and that it was inappropriate because some of the male teachers, and male students found it distracting for them."

Maddie Pynn, a student who came into school wearing a summer dress, said teachers told her her attire doesn't leave much to the imagination. "If one gust of wind came you'd see everything underneath."

The Newfoundland and Labrador English School District, in a statement issued to CBC News, explained the rules does not mean to infringe the rights of students.

"The latest version of the code was implemented in May 2012 and was approved by the school council and the Labrador School District. A summary of the dress code is available on the school's website and the full version is available from the school," the statement said.

"In essence, the dress code strives to provide an appropriate learning environment for students. As educators we want our students to dress for the occasion. Every person in the school must feel safe and comfortable and attire does play a role. The issue of student dress must always be approached with a balanced concern for the health, safety and well being of the entire learning community and the rights and privileges of individuals and groups as outlined by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms."

Pynn said teachers told her the dress code exists because teenage boys get easily distracted by girls' bodies. "A shoulder shouldn't make anyone uncomfortable, and if it does, you're the problem," she said.

She blasted the school is "teaching us how not to be distracting" rather than teach the boys "to have more respect towards women."

"I was talking to a few boys and they even said they are offended because the school is making them out to be uncontrolled horny monsters," Pynn said.