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| #Post#: 14400-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Kat Date: August 12, 2019, 3:52 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| A significant number of US school districts have adopted | |
| corporal punishment policies that replace compulsory cp with | |
| optional cp. In other words, the student has the choice in some | |
| situations between corporal punishment or an alternative. These | |
| programs seem fairly successful, at least to the extent that | |
| students are taking the cp option. Schools argue these programs | |
| are successful because they reduce the number of detentions, | |
| in-school suspensions, and off-campus suspensions. | |
| My question is whether such voluntary corporal punishment can be | |
| successful at a deeper level. Conventional thinking, based on | |
| behaviorist psychology, would argue that the more aversive a | |
| punishment, the more effective it is in changing behavior. | |
| Therefore, the punishment one prefers should never be the | |
| punishment one receives. | |
| However, cognitive dissonance theory suggests that one will feel | |
| more positive about a punishment one chooses. I'd argue that a | |
| positive attitude towards one's punishment more than offsets the | |
| deterrence value of inflicting the more aversive punishment. | |
| Kat | |
| #Post#: 14403-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Zyngaru Date: August 12, 2019, 4:17 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| It's interesting. If the punishment is desirable then it is | |
| less corrective. If it is disliked it is more corrective. So a | |
| boy who despises being grounded and would prefer to get spanked, | |
| should be grounded to change his behavior. A boy who despises | |
| getting spanked, but is fine with being grounded, should be | |
| spanked to get the most corrective benefit from the punishment. | |
| It makes logical sense, but that doesn't mean it is true. I | |
| wonder what is the truth? | |
| #Post#: 14404-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Kat Date: August 12, 2019, 4:24 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Zyngaru link=topic=1421.msg14403#msg14403 | |
| date=1565644655] | |
| It's interesting. If the punishment is desirable then it is | |
| less corrective. If it is disliked it is more corrective. So a | |
| boy who despises being grounded and would prefer to get spanked, | |
| should be grounded to change his behavior. A boy who despises | |
| getting spanked, but is fine with being grounded, should be | |
| spanked to get the most corrective benefit from the punishment. | |
| It makes logical sense, but that doesn't mean it is true. I | |
| wonder what is the truth? | |
| [/quote] | |
| Well, first of all, no punishment is desirable. By definition, | |
| punishment must be aversive. My premise is that the punishment | |
| one chooses may be the less aversive but the more effective. | |
| There is clearly no point whatsoever in giving a "punishment" | |
| that a person doesn't mind. | |
| Kat | |
| #Post#: 14405-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Jack Date: August 12, 2019, 4:34 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I tend to think tat, wit older kids, punishment in really less | |
| about correcting a behavior tan it is about stressing some | |
| behavior was unacceptable. | |
| In the case of school punishments, I feel tat most alternate | |
| punishments beyond detention are armful because they take the | |
| student out of class for a prolonged period of time. | |
| #Post#: 14408-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Kat Date: August 12, 2019, 4:40 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Jack link=topic=1421.msg14405#msg14405 | |
| date=1565645689] | |
| I tend to think that, wit older kids, punishment in really less | |
| about correcting a behavior than it is about stressing some | |
| behavior was unacceptable. | |
| In the case of school punishments, I feel that most alternate | |
| punishments beyond detention are armful because they take the | |
| student out of class for a prolonged period of time. | |
| [/quote] | |
| I'd like to move the debate beyond just schools. | |
| What is the difference between "correcting" behavior and | |
| "stressing some behavior is unacceptable"? These terms don't | |
| seem to me to have different meanings. | |
| Kat | |
| #Post#: 14411-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Adric Date: August 12, 2019, 10:32 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I can see why there is another benefit to offering a choice of | |
| punishment, aside from the one Kat mentions of giving the kid a | |
| more positive attitude. Presumably the school has attempted to | |
| make the two punishments roughly equivalent so that the two are | |
| chosen equally often (50-50). However, there may be a reason | |
| that a particular student finds one of the two much more severe | |
| for him than the other for reasons the school is not likely to | |
| be aware of. Perhaps if he has a detention he misses the school | |
| bus, has to walk three miles home, and his parents are furious | |
| with him for coming home late and are going to give him a | |
| licking. Another kid has no adverse impact from a stay in | |
| detention hall but he is terrified of CP. The school, however, | |
| thinks the two punishments are equivalent. If they really think | |
| they are equivalent then why not allow the choice? | |
| #Post#: 14420-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Jack Date: August 13, 2019, 7:19 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Kat link=topic=1421.msg14408#msg14408 | |
| date=1565646041] | |
| What is the difference between "correcting" behavior and | |
| "stressing some behavior is unacceptable"? These terms don't | |
| seem to me to have different meanings. | |
| [/quote] | |
| It is a subtle difference, and it might not actually be a | |
| difference. To me, younger children are still learning the | |
| rules. Older children know the rules. With younger children, | |
| you're teaching them through repetition and sometimes through | |
| painful reinforcement. With older kids, I think you really | |
| could talk to them in many cases. The problem is, I think that | |
| it sometimes needs a firm reinforcement beyond just talking. | |
| I guess what it comes down to with me is that I see punishment | |
| with younger children about showing them that they have to | |
| remember and follow the rules. With older children, kids who | |
| are more able to make their own decisions, it's more about | |
| getting them to consider what's acceptable or not and why. | |
| Maybe it is no difference, and it's definitely not easy to | |
| express, but that's how I think about it. | |
| #Post#: 14437-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Plagosus Date: August 14, 2019, 4:05 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| When they were discussing outlawing cp in the UK some proposed | |
| that it should be available if parents agreed. The idea was, I | |
| think rightly, shouted down. I think that for any given offence | |
| the type of punishment should be the same for everyone. | |
| #Post#: 14440-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Zyngaru Date: August 14, 2019, 8:44 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Plagosus link=topic=1421.msg14437#msg14437 | |
| date=1565773519] | |
| I think that for any given offence the type of punishment | |
| should be the same for everyone. | |
| [/quote] | |
| At one time I would have agreed with you, but I have discovered | |
| that standardized punishment doesn't work. It has to be | |
| tailored to the individual. | |
| Example. One of my Nieces has two boys 4 and 5 years old. A | |
| spanking works for the 5 year old. He breaks down even before | |
| you spank him. The 4 year old on the other hand, just smiles at | |
| you after you spank him. His goal in life is to frustrate | |
| people and his brother is his main target but he enjoys | |
| frustrating adults also. So getting spanked along with his | |
| brother is fine with him, just so long as he can get his brother | |
| spanked and crying. Now if you isolate him away from his | |
| brother, that drives him crazy. If you isolate him away from | |
| everyone it works even better. He hates being away from people | |
| he can torment. But spanking him, does absolutely nothing. He | |
| will just stand looking at you with a smile after. The brother | |
| that spanking works on, isolating him doesn't work. He enjoys | |
| being by himself. So you can't give these two boys the same | |
| punishment for the same offense. It just doesn't work to their | |
| personalities. | |
| That might be one of the problems with the criminal justice | |
| system. Standardized punishment might not be working. But then | |
| how do you write individualized punishment into the criminal | |
| code? | |
| #Post#: 14446-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Choosing Corporal Punishment | |
| By: Kat Date: August 14, 2019, 10:36 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Plagosus link=topic=1421.msg14437#msg14437 | |
| date=1565773519] | |
| When they were discussing outlawing cp in the UK some proposed | |
| that it should be available if parents agreed. The idea was, I | |
| think rightly, shouted down. I think that for any given offence | |
| the type of punishment should be the same for everyone. | |
| [/quote] | |
| Giving the choice to the student and not just the parent is a | |
| very different proposition. Even before schools began to adopt a | |
| formal policy of voluntary cp, students could ask informally to | |
| "burn off" detentions in some schools. | |
| I'm not convinced it's even possible to give the same punishment | |
| to everyone. Some will be exempt from corporal punishment | |
| because of physical or psychological issues, for instance. Some | |
| students can't do detentions for logistical reasons. Also, there | |
| is bound to be unevenness in punishment because individuals | |
| aren't the same. Some teachers and administrators tend to be | |
| more lenient in assigning punishment; others tend towards | |
| harshness. In administering cp, some teachers will inflict more | |
| painful punishments than others. Also, individual students will | |
| experience punishments subjectively. | |
| What has proved to be a singular failure in the US is the | |
| creation of "zero tolerance" policies, which mandate the same | |
| punishment for the same offense. Such policies have resulted in | |
| spectacular failures. The idea had a noble basis, which was to | |
| eliminate biases -- particularly racial biases -- in punishment. | |
| But, as Fairchild the chauffeur tells his daughter Sabrina, | |
| "Democracy can be a wickedly unfair thing." | |
| Kat | |
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