Body & Soul0 min ago
Corporal Punishment In Schools
114 Answers
What are your thoughts on this and would you be happy to see it introduced in the UK?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No. Teaching children that violence is the way towards any sort of behavioral change is utterly wrong.
Surely we are not going to start pandering to ineffective bullies who are unable to sanction their children except by hitting them.
What's next - children in cotton mills and up chimneys?
It's a barbaric idea, and belongs where it is, in our uneducated and less understanding past.
Surely we are not going to start pandering to ineffective bullies who are unable to sanction their children except by hitting them.
What's next - children in cotton mills and up chimneys?
It's a barbaric idea, and belongs where it is, in our uneducated and less understanding past.
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I was caned a few times at school and would hate for my grandchildren to get the same treatment.
The same children were caned repeatedly, rarely did it improve behaviour and was worn as some sort of badge of pride by many of the miscreants.
A few teachers were unable to control their tempers, and one or two got a thrill from it.
Detention was a much more effective punishment for me.
The same children were caned repeatedly, rarely did it improve behaviour and was worn as some sort of badge of pride by many of the miscreants.
A few teachers were unable to control their tempers, and one or two got a thrill from it.
Detention was a much more effective punishment for me.
Yes.
I have yet to see any evidence, scientific or anecdotal that the abolition of corporal punishment in schools has had a modifying effect on violence on present society.......in fact quite the opposite......society has become more violent.
As a last resort and performed in a reasonable manner, I see no reason not to re-introduce corporal punishment back in our schools. We are knee deep in Psychiatric syndromes, situations and diagnosis were if confirmed as a cause of disruptive behaviour can be excluded from corporal punishment.
Would the ewintroction have much benefit? I doubt it, but the present philosophy certainly isn't working and should be abandoned in favour of some other presumed method of punishment.
Corporal punishment was the method then......and somebody decided it didn't work........abolishment is now and certainly isn't working and now someone has suggested that we go back to square one.
Not a perfect solution , but I am all for it.
I have yet to see any evidence, scientific or anecdotal that the abolition of corporal punishment in schools has had a modifying effect on violence on present society.......in fact quite the opposite......society has become more violent.
As a last resort and performed in a reasonable manner, I see no reason not to re-introduce corporal punishment back in our schools. We are knee deep in Psychiatric syndromes, situations and diagnosis were if confirmed as a cause of disruptive behaviour can be excluded from corporal punishment.
Would the ewintroction have much benefit? I doubt it, but the present philosophy certainly isn't working and should be abandoned in favour of some other presumed method of punishment.
Corporal punishment was the method then......and somebody decided it didn't work........abolishment is now and certainly isn't working and now someone has suggested that we go back to square one.
Not a perfect solution , but I am all for it.