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Staff members of Carolina Parent magazine provide insight, tips and suggestions on making the most of family life.

Parents won't be warned of spanking

Child abuse prevention took a beating Wednesday in North Carolina. That’s when the state Senate rejected a bill that would require school administrators to tell parents their child could be paddled at school and allow adults to opt out of corporal punishment.

The Senate voted 25-21 against the bill that would have given parents in the 55 school districts that use corporal punishment a choice whether to allow their child to be spanked, The Associated Press reports. Now children in those 55 school districts can be spanked without their parents’ permission. If I were living in one of those districts, I’d be sure to contact my legislator to complain.

Here’s why: North Carolina is one of 21 states with a law that permits corporal punishment in public schools but may be the only state that does not monitor how that punishment is administered, according to Action for Children North Carolina, a child advocacy group, based in Raleigh.

Since there is no statewide ban of corporal punishment, Action for Children North Carolina has called for the practice to be standardized and monitored. Barbara Bradley, President and CEO of the group, said Thursday morning the group’s advocates are very disappointed the bill was stopped.

“We think it’s an issue of number one, parental rights—parents need to know whether their children are being subjected to corporal punishment or not and have a say and whether or not that kind of technique can be used with their children. And number two, we think that the opportunity for misuse of corporal punishment in very high.

“Sometimes, in some school districts, they have a grown male adult administering that kind of punishment to a young girl without anybody else in the room. Sometimes, it is done very harshly: We have seen evidence of marks, bruises, all kinds of things coming out of this, that border of abuse of a child, so we are very concerned about this issue.”

Spanking is a bad practice in general because it is linked with abuse, according to a study last year by the Injury Prevention Research Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In that survey of more than 1,400 mothers in North and South Carolina, mothers who said they or their partners spanked their children in the past year were nearly three times more likely to say they also doled out harsher punishments than those who said their children weren’t spanked. We’re talking beating, burning, kicking, hitting with an object somewhere other than the buttocks or shaking a child younger than 2.

If mothers who spank their kids will do that to their own children, should we be let strangers spank kids, and on top of it, not monitor them?

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Until you have been in the school and see how some children act toward teachers and other children don't critize spanking. Personally I think there should be more spanking. They certainly don't get punished at home but they should be made to behave in a public school and not disturbing everyone else. If you don't agree then homeschool your child.

If the Children would behave, then spanking is not an issue! I don't think any parent/caretaker wants their child spanked by an outsider but it's time that Parents take responsibility for their children and "teach" them the proper behavior.

phawley7436 I happen to know a thing or two about the plight of teachers today having been married to one. Most of the problems with the kids come from the fact they are bussed all over god's green earth to go to school. When you take kids from the hood (which is 75% of the discipline problems to begin with) and put them in schools with kids who have more you foster jealously. My wife was punched by a third grade boy. To the credit of the school, this child was sent home and because he had a history of being a bad kid, he was sent off to a school for bad kids. No one touched this child although I sure wanted a piece of the child's father to be honest. The answer to discipline in the schools starts and ends at home. What you get when administrators start handing out punishments are kids who want to get even. Then my friends you have a huge mess on your hands. That is when guns start showing up in school. Parents, do your duty and discipline your children. Don't leave it to someone else.

Speaking of students rights...the supreme court just decided that the school district in Arizona that made a student strip for a search of drugs violated her rights. In the same decision, the court found that the school can not be held responsible for monetary claims against them due to their violation of the students rights. To me this seems like a double standard. Even though this clown of a principal violated this students rights, he will not be held accountable for his actions. This is where the father should step in and make sure this male principal gets what is coming to his sorry behind. Oh and nice job WRAL for keeping us informed of these important decisions. I'm guessing the writer you assigned to this story is too busy with other non-important duties.

...."The answer to discipline in the schools starts and ends at home."

The ONLY answer to this problem. With children raising children from multiple baby daddies and the welfare system 'rewarding' them, the school gets the slop that comes from these homes!!! What the heck are they SUPPOSED to do with them??????????????

GWALLY

The trouble makers who do not wish to learn need to be expelled and be banned from returning. It is as simple as that. Our teachers are there to teach, not be referees or judges. Our administrators are there to see that the daily functions of the school are carried out properly. If the parents will not teach their children to behave and show respect, remove the children from the school. One bad apple will always ruin it for everyone else. So remove the bad one and get on with it.

The paddle hanging on the back wall of our principal's office in ever school I attended was not a decoration. Paddlings were rare, though, and not because they were squeamish about it - kids knew danged well that getting "whacks" as we called them was not only going to hurt, but the whole school would know what happened within the hour, and heaven help you when you got home to face your parents (who were called and informed of it). The offending child would be taken out into the hall, the paddling administered by the principal and observed by the teacher. Three whacks was the standard punishment, and boy, what a sound they made! Those of us in the classrooms cringed to hear them and silently vowed that wasn't going to be US out there.

I say do it in all districts, but monitor it.

To the "don't spank my child" folks ... well, there's a simple solution to that. If they don't misbehave, they won't be in any danger of it happening.

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