TV hosts ‘horrified’ as school brings back paddle
News in August 2022 that a school in
Missouri, United States, was to bring back corporal punishment ‘horrified’
television presenters in Britain.
According to a report in the Birmingham Mail
(UK), ‘ITV This Morning fans
have been left gobsmacked - after a school brought back corporal punishment.
The school in Missouri has brought back the cane.
‘“Smacking children returns to Missouri.
That’s right. I actually said it. It’s true,” Vernon Kay said today. “Goodness
me,” Rochelle Humes said.
‘“This is outrageous,” Vernon said.
“Vernon, you’re right, if the school had just introduced this off its own back,
I could absolutely have no support,” Nick Ferrari said.
“If the parents want it, it at least has
to be discussed, surely,” he continued. Vernon told him: “Yeah, I agree, but
still... it feels just archaic, doesn’t it?"
‘Rrochelle said: "Like a massive step
backwards in time.” Vernon commented: “I remember getting the ruler and I think
the pain still stays with me.”’
The ‘outrage’ followed reports like this from
the Daily Mirror
(UK):
Students
will be punished with wooden paddle as school brings back corporal punishment
A town will reintroduce corporal
punishment in its schools following discussions
between teachers, parents and officials on how to improve
discipline.
Punishing students physically was stopped
in the district of Cassville, Missouri in 2001.
However, misbehaving students face being
struck with a wooden paddle under new proposals, which will also see mobile
phones banned from classrooms and an academy created for pupils who fail to
thrive in a traditional classroom setting.
Missouri is one of 19 states in the US
where corporal punishment is still legal.
Only “certified personnel” would be
allowed to carry out corporal punishments – which would be reserved for when
“alternative means of discipline have failed” - and they would be administered
in front of a district employee who would act as a witness.
Children would not be struck in front of
other students, with younger students being hit on the buttocks once or twice,
with up to three blows for older students.
The Times reported a memo circulated
among parents which said: “It shall be administered so that there can be no
chance of bodily injury or harm. Striking a student on the head or face is not
permitted.”
Cassville school district superintendent
Merlyn Johnson told the Springfield Newsleader: “Parents have said ‘why can’t
you paddle my student?’
“There had been requests from parents for
us to look into it.”
The US Supreme Court ruled in 1977 that
corporal punishment was constitutional after a case was brought on behalf of
14-year-old James Ingraham.
Ingraham, a student in Florida, was
paddled more than 20 times by his school principal while being restrained by
the assistant principal, leaving him needing medical treatment, and a claim was
filed that this amounted to a “cruel and unusual punishment”.
However, the court decided that corporal
punishment was not a violation of the eighth amendment because cruel and
unusual punishments referred to convicted criminals rather than schoolchildren.
That ruling meant that individual states
could make their own decisions on corporal punishment and, according to figures
from the National Center for Education Statistics, 70,348 students were
subjected to it in 2018 across 19 states.
The practice is opposed by many, including
the American Psychological Association, which argues that is can cause children
to become more aggressive and disruptive.
Research in Pennsylvania and Texas in 2016
found that corporal punishment was 50 per cent more likely to be used on
African-American children and students with disabilities.
“Dozens of research studies have confirmed
that corporal punishment does not promote better behaviour in children,”
Elizabeth Gershoff of the University of Texas, one of the authors, said at the
time.
Corporal punishment has been banned in
schools in the UK since 1986.
As published by the Daily Mirror
online, 30 August 2022.
Picture credit: Getty Images.
Traditional School Discipline
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