‘Extraordinary’ Punishment records found in school basement
When a headmaster tidied up the school basement in 2012 he found “extraordinary” records of how corporal punishment was meted out thirty years previously, the Mail online reports.
Six blows on the rump! Extraordinary records reveal
how corporal punishment was meted out in our schools
Scribbled notes from a
headmaster reveal how one unruly pupil guilty of “bullying, vandalism and
general acts of thuggery” was disciplined in this manner.
The punishments dealt out
in the 1970s and 80s were detailed in a book entitled “Record of Corporal
Punishment” found by headmaster Mike Wood as he looked for artefacts to help
with his primary school’s centenary celebrations.
The fascinating previously
unseen records of Greenfield Primary in Oldham, Greater Manchester, illustrate
how corporal punishment was dished out to naughty pupils in Britain’s schools.
Other youngsters were given
smacks and slaps for a range of misdemeanours including biting, an attack on a
girl’s neck, “continual disruptive behaviour” and “repeated acts of vandalism
and indiscipline.”
The book was accompanied by
a list of rules set down by council officials which said that corporal
punishment could only be inflicted for “very grave offences until other methods
have been tried and failed.”
The rules stated it could
only be used as a method of disciplining children by the headmaster or teachers
with at least three years’ experience using a “thin flexible cane” supplied by
the education authority.
All details of canings and
actual number of slaps or smacks had to be recorded in the book and any girls
deemed to have been naughty would have to be caned by women teachers with
relevant teaching experience.
Tough love:
These entries from the early 80s show that one pupil received “three blows with
back of hand on rump” and another was given “one slap on back of leg” |
Troublesome
tykes: These two six-year-olds were both “spanked on the buttocks with the flat
of the hand” in 1974 for biting another child |
Mr Wood who has been
headteacher at the 433 pupil building since 1998 said: “Things have totally
changed here over the years and it is fascinating to look back.
“The Corporal Punishment
book recorded when a child was punished, who by and what the punishment was and
it would be signed off by the teacher that had implemented that punishment.
“One of the things a child had
been punished for was ‘biting and general thuggery.’
“Now it’s more mutual
respect, we listen to the children and value their opinion and they respect us
for that. Children used to have to sit in silence years ago but now at school
children collaborate, help each other and they’re listened to more.
“We seek their opinions and
they feel more involved. I think that makes for a really happy environment.”
Extracted from
the Mail
online 31 March 2012.
Traditionalschooldiscipline@gmail.com
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