Kerala <http://www.hindu.com/2007/03/06/25hdline.htm> - Thiruvananthapuram


* Corporal punishment cannot make a child more intelligent: resource
material *

Staff Reporter

the hindu

06/03/07

http://www.hindu.com/2007/03/06/stories/2007030601420200.htm

* Studies show that the theory of corporal punishment is an ineffective
discipline strategy with children and it is often proved to be dangerous. *

   THIRUVANANTHAPURAM: Corporal punishment cannot improve a child's
understanding of a subject or make him `more' intelligent, says a resource
material for teachers published by People's Watch, a human rights
organisation based in Tamil Nadu.

The 70-page manual, prepared with the assistance of the European Union, was
distributed to nearly 400 teachers from various schools in
Thiruvananthapuram, Pathanamthitta, Kottayam and Palakkad at a programme on
`Preventing torture in India,' organised by the human rights organisation in
association with the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, in the city recently.

The manual says that research studies have shown that the theory of corporal
punishment is an ineffective discipline strategy with children of all ages
and it is often proved to be dangerous. In fact, punishment can create
anger, resentment and low self-esteem in the minds of the children. It
teaches them violence and revenge as solutions to problems and perpetuates
itself, as children may imitate what the adults are doing. A frequently-hit
child will be a problematic person tomorrow, the manual warns.

However, despite these inherent hazards, corporal punishment still continues
to be a regular affair in thousands of schools everywhere. The manual also
lists some of the `savage old generation' methods of punishment inflicted on
children at school. `Kodandam' was one such practice that was in vogue a
generation ago. The punishment meant hanging errant boys upside down and
thrashing them. In another more brutal version, children were hung upside
down over red chillies, which were lit. Thus, they were forced to sustain
both beating and the pungent smell of burning chillies.

Some of the modern day punishments include making children stand in the sun
for an entire day, make them kneel down and do work, force them to stand on
the bench, caning, pinching, twisting ears and placing school bags on their
heads.

In addition to physical trauma, corporal punishments such as slapping by the
opposite sex, humiliating children in public, labelling them according to
their misbehaviour, locking them in dark rooms, making them sit on the floor
of the classroom or pay fines, and preventing them from entering the class
can also lead to emotional and negative reinforcement in the minds of the
students, says the resource material.

The resource material also points out that a Division Bench of the Delhi
High Court had held that corporal punishment was not in keeping with a
child's dignity. The court had ruled that inflicting physical punishment on
a child was not in consonance with his or her right to life guaranteed by
Article 21 of the Indian Constitution. "Just because child is small he or
she cannot be denied these rights... Even animals are protected against
cruelty. Our children surely cannot be worse off than animals," the High
Court ruled.
http://no2torture.blogspot.com/

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
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