Imposing moral values on others
Re: Imposing moral values on others
MTT wrote:It is sometimes easy to see who is not a classroom teacher on these issues and even easier to see who hasn't been inside a school for a few years. Nobody is for corporal punishment. But teachers would like to spend more time teaching and less time in crowd control. Yes, in my hometown students for the most part know how to act. I have no explanation for most of the schools in Thailand. It is unfortunate. It is not the teacher. question: Why is one of the most prized pieces of classroom equipment in Thailand a loudspeaker?
And as for your comparison to Africa, I am not interested in discussing every issue. I heard most of the kids don't have a school to attend there and that many couldn't write anyway because the corporal punishment there often involves the loss of a limb by a machete chop. And it is stupid to bring in the eye-poking and head bashing of the 3 Stooges. No, let's not go crazy on our comparisons by generalizing.
Corporal punishment in school should not involve any more than a quick paddle swat to a fully-clothed rear end. And it should not be used until everything else has been exhausted. That point is reached somewhere between 'i don't know what else to do' and the reward of being given a few days off and being sent home for a day or two (which solves nothing unless the parents are supportive). I don't even advocate school involvement with drugs, alcohol, or cigarettes. These students should be given to police authorities. They have broken the law and they and their parents can deal with it. Not me, I teach grammar or maths or whatever. This shoving of all values education and responsibility to the school is ridiculous.
What a truly bizarre post!
On the one hand you suggest reporting offenders to the police and on the other hand you are suggesting it is OK for teachers to break the law and administer CP.
Are you aware it is illegal? Are you really suggesting teachers should break the law?
Its irrelevant whether its right or wrong - its illegal, end of story surely!?
I am not against CP per se. but I am very much against teachers flouting the law of the land.
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paullane - Posts: 3
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Re: Imposing moral values on others
MTT wrote:Take just one issue: corporal punishment in schools. Mostly not allowed now. And the schools are out of control. Don't get me wrong, I don't think it is good. But I do remember the possibility that it could happen was a good deterrent. Nobody in my elementary school back in the dark ages when I was in school ever wanted to be taken to the Principal's office where there was an electric paddling machine. Everybody knew it was there for really bad students even though none of us ever saw it!! Alas, all of those machines are gone now. Now the teachers and the good students suffer as the disruptive students take control.
....true, but yet creative teachers will always find ways of re establishing control of their classrooms despite having a few "bad" apples. I'm one of those types of teachers. Corporal punishment is very out dated.
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jphoto_guy - Posts: 6
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Re: Imposing moral values on others
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MTT - Posts: 46
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Re: Imposing moral values on others
Thats your start point. Beyond that you use what thousands of others use perfectly well. How come thousands of us teaching here (Thai and foreign) manage to do it? As I said I am NOT anti CP, I am anti criminals working with kids. If you truly believe that CP works then lobby to change the law. I know it doesnt work, if it did it would not be the same few kids getting whacked all the time.
MORE importantly is the effect is has on the GOOD kids. Do you ever consider them when you beat a "bad un"? Why should "good uns" be too scared to go to school? And they are, thousands of them.
As to your comment about "only 50 minutes" - well in my case its 40 and if I spend the first 10 dishing out beatings for not doing homework etc that means the good kids are losing 25% of their valuable learning time.
74% of beatings are for minor offenses, that is way too high. The most common of which are, in order:
1. Not doing homework - sorry but homework is extra curricular and although we all want kids to do it there is no legal obligation on them to do so which means ANY punishment is unwarranted whatever it may be.
2. Getting homework wrong - you cannot force a child to be Einstein. Indeed its more a reflection on the teachers than the child. beating a child for their own inadequacies is ridiculous.
3. Being late for school - hardly the crime of the century and often out of their hands.
4. Incorrect dress code, haircut, hygiene. My job is to educate children. hair style or dirty fingernails makes NO difference to a child's ability to learn.
You didnt respond re your contradictions, report criminal offenses by students but not by their role models seems a very strange philosophy to adhere to.
If a teacher is hitting kids they are are breaking the law and committing a criminal act. If their conscience can cope with that then good luck to them, at least until they are caught and their license removed. A teachers job is to educate children but you cant force them to learn. Anything beyond that is the duty of the parent and even the state but has no place in an institution of learning.
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paullane - Posts: 3
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Re: Imposing moral values on others
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MTT - Posts: 46
- Joined: Thu Jan 01, 1970 7:00 am
Re: Imposing moral values on others
CP is damaging to students - it is abuse. Simply put. You strike a student then you should expect the same in return.
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jphoto_guy - Posts: 6
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