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Physical punishment is a crime!
by Manish Ahuja on Jun 26, 2007 08:35 AM   Permalink | Hide replies

I vehemently oppose the idea of physical punishment, slapping etc. to discipline children. It is not an effective means of disciplining children.
Effective discipline helps children learn to control their behavior so that they act according to their ideas of what is right and wrong, not because they fear punishment. For example, they are honest because they think it is wrong to be dishonest, not because they are afraid of getting caught.

The purpose of punishment is to stop a child from doing what you don't want - and using a painful or unpleasant method to stop him.

In my opinion there are four kinds of punishment

physical punishment - slapping, spanking, switching, paddling, and using a belt or hair brush.

verbal punishment - shaming, ridiculing, using cruel words, saying "I don't love you."

withholding rewards - "You can't watch TV if you don't do your homework."

penalties - "You broke the window so you will have to pay for it with money from your allowance."

The first two kinds of punishment, physical and verbal, are not considered to be effective discipline methods. The other two, withholding rewards and giving penalties, can be used either as effective discipline methods or as punishment - depending on how parents administer them.

A swat on the bottom is a mild physical punishment. While it may do no permanent physical harm, it does not help the child develop a conscience. Instead, it teaches him that physical violence is an acceptable way of dealing with probl

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  RE:Physical punishment is a crime!
by Manish Ahuja on Jun 26, 2007 08:35 AM   Permalink
A swat on the bottom is a mild physical punishment. While it may do no permanent physical harm, it does not help the child develop a conscience. Instead, it teaches him that physical violence is an acceptable way of dealing with problems. Parents should avoid physical punishment. If they find themselves using it, then something is wrong and their method of discipline is not working. They may as well admit that spanking is more effective in relieving the parents' frustration than in teaching the child self-control. More effective methods are needed.

Harsh physical punishment and verbal abuse can never be justified as ways to discipline children. Parents usually spank when they are angry; a parent may not realize how hard he is striking the child. Verbal abuse hurts the child's self concept.

Physical punishment usually doesn't work for several reasons. First, it makes the child hate himself and others. Physical punishment makes the child think that there must be something awfully wrong with him to be treated so badly. If children think they are "bad," then they will act "bad." A vicious cycle is formed. The child who has been treated harshly has no reason to be good. Or he may be good just to keep from being punished and not learn to be good because he thinks it is the right thing to do.

Children who have been spanked feel that they have paid for their misbehavior and are free to misbehave again. In other words, spanking frees the child from feelings of remorse which are nee

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  RE:RE:Physical punishment is a crime!
by Manish Ahuja on Jun 26, 2007 08:36 AM   Permalink
Children who have been spanked feel that they have paid for their misbehavior and are free to misbehave again. In other words, spanking frees the child from feelings of remorse which are needed to prevent future misbehavior.

Parents who use physical punishment are setting an example of using violence to settle problems or solve conflicts, Children imitate their parents' behavior. When parents use physical punishment, children are more likely to use violent acts to settle their conflicts with others.

Another disadvantage of using physical punishment is that parents have to find other discipline methods when the child becomes as tall and as strong as the parent! Why not start using effective discipline methods when the child is young?

Where reward and punishment focus on the child, encouragement and reality discipline target the act. Reward and punishment teaches the child to be "good" as long as we are looking. When rewards are our chief way of motivating children we run the risk of creating "carrot seekers": children who are always looking for and expecting a reward every time they do something good or right. If we give a child money for making his bed this week, he'll wonder where his money is next week. Instead of being self-motivated by a desire to cooperate or help other family members, we have taught the child to look to us for his source of motivation.

Effective Discipline . . .
Helps the child learn self-control
Can be used with teenagers
Builds the child's self-es

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  RE:RE:RE:Physical punishment is a crime!
by Manish Ahuja on Jun 26, 2007 08:37 AM   Permalink
Effective Discipline . . .
Helps the child learn self-control
Can be used with teenagers
Builds the child's self-esteem
Sets a good example of effective ways to solve problems.

Harsh Punishment . . .
Teaches the child to deceive parents
Won't work with teenagers
Tears down self-esteem
Teaches the child that violence is an acceptable way to solve problems.

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  RE:Physical punishment is a crime!
by Jalees Jasmin on Jun 26, 2007 11:31 AM   Permalink
Well said Manish. I go with your views.

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Spanking may land you in jail