| Self-Protection/Prevention
22 STATES ALLOW PADDLING/CORPORAL PUNISHMENT IN
SCHOOLS
Is your state one of the them?
Here are a few words of caution to parents who have children in
schools that use violent punishments, a.k.a. paddling. They need
to anticipate disingenuousness on the part of educators and administrators
who typically do not invite dialog with the public on this topic.
When drawn into discussions about "discipline," school
officials are apt to trot out those familiar, well-rehearsed, stock
responses, the purpose of which is to divert criticism and lull
parents.
MYTH - Corporal punishment is used only after all other means have
failed and is governed by strict guidelines.
FACT - The number of pupils beaten will always be grossly underestimated
because school administrators are savvy enough to AVOID saying things
that might alarm the public or draw attention to themselves. Furthermore,
What does 'strict guidelines' mean? More often than not, violent
punishments are used as a first response for trivial offenses. Guidelines,
where they exist at all, exist more on paper than in practice. As
a general rule, reliance on fear, force and violence in educational
settings is inversely proportional to the level of competence of
the educators involved. The least competent tend to be the most
violent. They are also the most resistant to reform and most rejecting
of other methods to correct unacceptable behavior.
MYTH - Teachers' right to resort to corporal punishment must be
retained because certain students can't be controlled by any other
means.
FACT - Violent punishment causes far more bad behavior than it corrects,
if it corrects at all. The more some children are subject to educator
violence, the more misbehaved they become. The very act of physical
punishment destroys trust and engenders hostility toward the institution
that is supposed to be serving them. As for children who conform
outwardly due to fear of punishment, they are receiving an education
mainly in one subject area: the abuse of power. Some of them will
put that lesson into practice at the earliest opportunity.
MYTH - Well-behaved children have nothing to worry about.
FACT - Wherever pupil beating is allowed, all children worry about
it. They know that punishers typically act on impulse and are rarely,
if ever, called upon to justify their actions before or after the
fact. A steady diet of fear and anxiety impedes learning and, moreover,
is dangerous to children's health.
MYTH - This method of pupil management has been in use for many
years and it is overwhelmingly supported by parents and the public.
FACT - It is true that violent pupil management has been used throughout
recorded history. But today, only the most culturally backward places
continue to use it. In almost the entire democratic world, violent
punishment of schoolchildren is illegal, and nowhere is it making
a comeback. The dwindling number of parents who approve of these
methods are themselves the products of such a system. Naturally,
they feel reassured when they see teachers at school modeling the
same bad behavior that they use on their own children at home. Violent
parents and violent teachers alike delude themselves when they claim
that their methods are universally approved.
MYTH -- It works.
FACT -- If it worked, why do punishers have to keep punishing? And
why are our maximum security prisons filled with violent felons
who were reared and educated by these very same methods? Parents
tend to trust educators who, after all, are highly trained in their
specialty and are licensed by the state. And virtually all parents
want to believe that those who take charge of their child at school
are motivated by genuine, nurturing feelings toward the child. Educators
recognize and pander to this powerful, natural desire. Deliberate
vagueness about the details serves the needs of both parties: the
practical needs of the educators and the emotional needs of the
parents. Responsible, thoughtful parents, however, need to bear
in mind that they are delegating their most important responsibility
to total strangers - strangers who have their own agenda, who vary
widely in their level of competence, who operate with minimal supervision
and with near-absolute impunity. Few people would hand over their
car keys in the same circumstances, with the same degree of trust.
Readers who visit the state education Web sites listed below and
look for the word "paddle" or the phrase "corporal
punishment" will come up empty-handed. One would never guess
that in these school systems children are beaten in their pelvic
area with wooden weapons between 1/3 and 1/2 million times annually
according to the most conservative estimates. Some researchers estimate
the number of legal pupil beatings in the 22 pupil beating states
at about 1 million per year. Small wonder nobody's talking!
Pupil-Beating Institutions
ALABAMA
Office of the Superintendent of Education
Alabama Department of Education
Gordon Persons Office Building
50 North Ripley Street
P.O. Box 302102
Montgomery, AL 36130-2101
Tel.: (334) 242-9702 FAX: (334) 242-9708
Web site: www.alsde.edu
ARIZONA
Office of the Director
Arizona Department of Education
State Capitol
1700 W. Washington
Phoenix, AZ 85007
Tel.: (602) 542-5460 FAX(602) 542-5440
Web site: www.ade.state.az.us
ARKANSAS
Office of the Director
Arkansas Department of Education
Four State Capitol Mall, Room 304 A
Little Rock, AR 72201-1071
Tel.: (501) 682-4204 FAX: (501) 682 1079
Web site: arkedu.state.ar.us
COLORADO
Office of the Commissioner of Education
Colorado Department of Education
201 East Colfax Avenue
Denver, CO 80203-1799
Tel.: (303) 866-6808 FAX: (303) 866-6938
Web site: www.cde.state.co.us
FLORIDA
Office of the Commissioner of Education
Florida Department of Education
Capitol Building, Room PL 08
Tallahassee, FL 32301
Tel.: (904) 487-1785 FAX: (904)488-1492
Web site: www.firn.edu/doe
GEORGIA
Office of the State Superintendent of Schools
Twin Towers East
Atlanta, GA 30334-5001
Tel.: (404) 657-0516
Web site: www.doe.k12.ga.us/index.asp
IDAHO
Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction
Idaho Department of Education
Len B. Jordan Office Building
650 West State Street
P.O. Box 83720
Boise, ID 83720
Tel.: (208) 334-3300 FAX: (208) 334-2228
Web site: www.sde.state.id.us
INDIANA
Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction
Indiana Department of Education
State House, Room 229
Indianapolis, IN 46204-2798
Tel.: (317) 232-6665 FAX: (317) 232-8004
ideanet.doe.state.in.us
KANSAS
Office of the Commissioner of Education
120 South East Tenth Avenue
Topeka, KS 66612-1182
Tel.: (913) 296-3202 FAX: (913) 296-7933
Web site: www.ksbe.state.ks.us
KENTUCKY
Office of the Commissioner of Education
Kentucky Department of Education
Capitol Plaza Tower - 500 Mero Street
Frankfort, KY 40601
Tel.: (502) 564-3141 FAX: (502) 564-5680
Web site: www.kde.state.ky.us
LOUISIANA
Office of the Superintendent of Education
Louisiana Department of Education
626 North 4th Street, 12th Floor
Baton Rouge, LA 70804-9064
Tel.: (504) 342-3602 FAX: (504) 342-7316
Web site: www.doe.state.la.us/DOE/asps/home.asp
MISSISSIPPI
Office of the Superintendent of Education
State Department of Education
550 High Street, Room 501
Jackson, MS 39201
Tel.: (601) 359-3512 FAX: (601) 359-3242
Web site: www.state.ms.us/its/msportal.nsf/WebForm/Education
MISSOURI
Office of the Commissioner of Education
Missouri Department of Elementary
& Secondary Education
205 Jefferson Street, 6th Floor
Jefferson City, MO 65102
Tel.: (572) 751-4446 FAX: (573) 751-1179
Web site: www.dese.state.mo.us/
NEW MEXICO
Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction
New Mexico Department of Education
Education Building
300 Don Gaspar
Santa Fe, NM 87501-2786
Tel.: (505) 827-6688 FAX: (505) 827-6520
Web site: sde.state.nm.us/
NORTH CAROLINA
Office of the State Superintendent of Public Education
North Carolina Department of Public Instruction
Education Building
301 North Wilmington Street
Raleigh, NC 27601-2825
Tel.: (919) 715-1277 FAX: (919) 715-1278
Web site: www.dpi.state.nc.us/
OHIO
Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction
Ohio Department of Education
65 South Front Street, Room 810
Columbus, OH 43215-4183
Tel.: (614) 466-3304 FAX: (614) 644-5960
Web site: www.ode.state.oh.us
OKLAHOMA
Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction
Oklahoma State Department of Education
Hodge Education Building
2500 North Lincoln Boulevard
Oklahoma City, OK 73105-4599
Tel.: (405) 521-4887 FAX: (405) 421-6205
Web site: sde.state.ok.us/
PENNSYLVANIA
Office of the Secretary of Education
Pennsylvania Department of Education
333 Market Street. 10th Floor
Harrisburg, PA 17126-0333
Tel.: (717) 787-5820 FAX (717) 787-7222
Web site: www.pde.psu.edu/
SOUTH CAROLINA
Office of the State Superintendent of Education
South Carolina Department of Education
1006 Rutledge Building
1429 Senate Street
Columbia, SC 29201
Tel.: (803) 734-8492 FAX: (803) 734-4426
Web site: www.state.sc.us/edu/k-12les.html
TENNESSEE
Office of the Commissioner of Education
Tennessee Department of Education
Sixth Floor, Gateway Plaza
710 James Robertson Parkway
Nashville, TN 37243-0375
Tel.: (615) 741-2731 FAX: (615) 741-6236
Web site: www.state.tn.us/education/
TEXAS
Office of the Commissioner of Education
Office of the Texas Education Agency
William B. Travis Building
1701 North Congress Avenue
Austin, TX 78701-1494
Tel.: (512) 463-5825 FAX: (512) 463-9008
Web site: www.state.tx.us/Education/
WYOMING
Office of the State Department of Public Instruction
Wyoming Department of Education
2300 Capitol Avenue, 2nd Floor
Hathaway Building
Cheyenne, WY 82002-0050
Tel.: (307) 777-7675 FAX: (307) 777-6234
Web site: www.k12.wy.us/
Information courtesy of Jordan Riak http://www.nospank.net |