Spanking in schools
By laglen
@laglen (19759)
United States
April 19, 2010 9:42am CST
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/15/AR2010041505964.html
TEMPLE, TEX. -- In an era when students talk back to teachers, skip class and wear ever-more-risque clothing to school, one central Texas city has hit upon a deceptively simple solution: Bring back the paddle.
Most school districts across the country banned paddling of students long ago. Texas sat that trend out. Nearly a quarter of the estimated 225,000 students who received corporal punishment nationwide in 2006, the latest figures available, were from the Lone Star State.
But even by Texas standards, Temple is unusual. The city, a compact railroad hub of 60,000 people, banned the practice and then revived it at the demand of parents who longed for the orderly schools of yesteryear. Without paddling, "there were no consequences for kids," said Steve Wright, who runs a construction business and is Temple's school board president.
Since paddling was brought back to the city's 14 schools by a unanimous board vote in May, behavior at Temple's single high school has changed dramatically, Wright said, even though only one student in the school system has been paddled.
"The discipline problem is much better than it's been in years," Wright said, something he attributed to the new punishment and to other discipline programs schools are trying. Residents of the city's comfortable homes, most of which sport neighborly, worn chairs out front, praise the change.
"There are times when maybe a good crack might not be a bad idea," said Robert Pippin, a custom home builder who sports a goatee and cowboy boots. His son graduated from Temple schools several years ago.
Corporal punishment remains legal in 20 states, mostly in the South, but its use is diminishing. Ohio ended it last year, and a movement for a federal ban is afoot. A House subcommittee held a hearing on the practice Thursday, and its chairman, Rep. Carolyn McCarthy (D-N.Y.), is gearing up for a push to end the practice once and for all. She plans to introduce legislation within weeks.
"When you look that the federal government has outlawed physical punishment in prisons, I think the time has come that we should do it in schools," she said.
A joint American Civil Liberties Union-Human Rights Watch report last year found that students with disabilities were disproportionately subjected to corporal punishment, sometimes in direct response to behavioral problems that were a result of their disabilities. Many educators and psychologists say that positive tools, such as giving praise for good behavior and withholding it for bad, are far more effective for discouraging misbehavior.
Those techniques "encourage them to behave well in the future," said report author Alice Farmer. Paddling "makes students lose respect for their teachers."
Rules about paddling vary from district to district, but typically only administrators, not teachers, can mete out the punishment, which is done in private. Usually, a long, flat wooden paddle is used to give as many as three blows across the student's clothed rear end, although Farmer found students who had been hit many more times. Boys are overwhelmingly the target.
Not everybody in Texas is gung-ho about paddling. The practice has been banned in the state's big cities, and its use varies from campus to campus in districts that allow it.
What is your opinion? should paddling be brought back?
2 people like this
4 responses
@rene12 (794)
• Philippines
19 Apr 10
Even though it brings them to a good future, it will not be good if it were forced. The student will hold grudges and might do it to others especially with their children and that is not a good thing. Children should enjoy being a child so that they will have it in the future as good memories
I think that some of the Japan's teacher beats their students but I only get a few news about it. Some are armed with a stick but I don't know if it is really true coz I have never been there before 
I think that some of the Japan's teacher beats their students but I only get a few news about it. Some are armed with a stick but I don't know if it is really true coz I have never been there before 
2 people like this
@Maggiepie (7816)
• United States
20 Apr 10
In a few extreme cases, under close supervision, yes, it can work. I do think it used to be overused here in Texas, & in ways that bordered on real abuse sometimes, but I also saw a lot less wild behavior in schools, then. Girls can do just as badly as boys, so they should get the same punishment as their male counterparts.
I've been paddled, & I've been beaten & abused. BIG diff! I was very wild in my teens, & paddling would definitely have curbed a lot of my misbehavior! Some kids just ask for it. Literally, in fact.
Maggiepie
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@laglen (19759)
• United States
20 Apr 10
I agree, as a parent way back when I spanked my child, I would never do it out of anger or spite. If I was angry, she would go to her room until I calmed down. I do not think it should be to inflict pain but to get their attention and show the severity of the infraction.
1 person likes this
@Maggiepie (7816)
• United States
20 Apr 10
It should also never be carried out by the "injured party." I had a science teacher once who was also a football coach. He was famous for his huge "paddle" & his brutal "spankings." One day he called a teen he taught in both classes to come up & bend over his desk--I forget for what offense. I've no idea whether it was instinctive fear, or a prank, but when the teacher drew back the board to swing, the teen jumped out of the way. That board hit the wooden desk so hard it not only broke the board, but took part of the desk with it! We all could plainly tell, then, that had he hit the boy, the kid would probably have had to go to the hospital with some broken bone or other. I seem to recall his jump made the teacher even more furious, because usually he would grin when he did his "paddlings."
I was spanked once, by a 3rd & 4th grade teacher we called only "Miss Oma." Strict, & mean to go with it, she also had a small paddle. She used it frequently. She'd carved some design on it--a wagon wheel, I think--& half an hour after she used it, my leg still had what we kids called "the mark of Oma" on it, & it still stung. The design made the sting hurt harder, somehow. As I recall, I also didn't even deserve a paddling. I was a very obedient child who loved to learn, at that time in my life.
Yes, supervised, private, merciful & rare. That's how paddlings should be used!
Maggiepie
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@scarlet_woman (23463)
• United States
22 Apr 10
i don't think schools should have the right to use physical punishment on kids at all-that's up to the parents.
if they're dressed that bad,send them home.
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