Published 1978
by STOPP in Croydon .
Written in English
Edition Notes
Statement | edited for STOPP - Society of Teachers Opposed to Physical Punishment - by Peter Newell. |
Contributions | Newell, Peter, 1940- |
ID Numbers | |
---|---|
Open Library | OL14102413M |
Book. Full-text available do not support the use of corporal punishment in schools, they appear to agree that, for troublesome and uncounsellable children, it can be used as a last resort CORPORAL PUNISHMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA Prior to , corporal punishment was frequently relied on to ensure discipline in South African schools. It became acknowledged as an essential part of the schooling system. The predominant Christian National Education policy affirmed the role of the teachers as disciplinarians. Generally, corporal The use corporal punishment within the school setting was prohibited by the South African Schools Act of The use of corporal punishment as a judicial sentence was prohibited by the Abolition of Corporal Punishment Act of The use of corporal punishment in alternate care settings was prohibited by amended The book argues the case for judicial corporal punishment (JCP). It was first published in Briefly, he argues that JCP can be justified on the grounds that society requires offenders to be punished as well as reformed, and that prison does neither properly, as well as costing the taxpayer a
The ban on corporal punishment came into force in in British state schools (private schools took a while longer: until in England and Wales, UNITED KINGDOM: School CP. Corporal punishment in British state schools, and also in private schools receiving any element of public funding, was banned by parliament in For an overview of the events leading up to abolition, and its aftermath, see a Jan newspaper article, "Sparing the rod". In the remaining private schools it was banned in in England and Wales, Here are various ways learners ought to be disciplined in schools, and corporal punishment is not one of them, having been banned since On November 4, The Citizen reported that Daeraad judicial punishment in england historical handbooks Posted By Debbie Macomber Public Library TEXT ID a6 Online PDF Ebook Epub Library rivlin understanding the law oxford theodore ft plucknett a concise history of the common law butterworth co judy hodgson ed the english legal heritage oyez
Read the full-text online edition of Corporal Punishment in American Education: Readings in History, Practice, and Alternatives (). The Abolition of Corporal Punishment in New Jersey Schools An Analysis of Research on Punishment and Its Relation to the Use of Corporal Punishment in the Schools This Brief reviews the past, present, and future use of school corporal punishment in the United States, a practice that remains legal in 19 states as it is constitutionally permitted according to the U.S. Supreme Court. As a result of school corporal punishment, nearly , children are › Psychology › Child & School Psychology. Taken together and argued with philosophical delicacy, Fitz-Gibbon delivers a damning argument for the abolition of corporal punishment in United States’ public schools.” (Wendy C. Hamblet, metapsychology online reviews, , Vol. 21 (32), August, ) › Books › New, Used & Rental Textbooks › Humanities. This book examines corporal punishment in United States public schools. The practicewhich is still legal in nineteen statesaffects approximately a quarter million children each year. Justification for the use of physical punishment is often based on religious texts. Rather than