Why not both?
I don't know.
I can only go by my own experiences but a smack was painful, but over with fairly quickly, and I didn't want another.
Kind of think the later is worse. Especially if yelling at them is also involved.
Yell then shun
Why not both?
So giving a kid quick sharp slap to the bum is worse than mentally and emotionally abusing them by shunning?
Are you saying that ALL parents who might smack their kids are like this or are you just being ridiculous?Some of the nastiest kids I have ever seen have been raised by "pro spanking" parents.
Of course, the parents of these kids usually have no alternative means of disciplining/guiding these children and are invariably afraid to interact with them.
Are you saying that ALL parents who might smack their kids are like this or are you just being ridiculous?
I've never seen any study demonstrate that parents who spank and refrain from physical abuse have better child discipline outcomes than parents who do not spank.
How does spanking model good behavior? In the best case it hopes to encourage good behavior, but it models aggression, as far as I can tell.
The distinction between 'discipline' and 'punishment' strikes me as unsustainable, since discipline (in this sense) entails punishment. Hell, 'disciplinary action' is a euphemism for punishment. Then again, euphemism might be the goal here.
Whenever I talk to parents about this, I always tell them, "I can control your kid plus 30 others for over 7 hours a day without hitting them. You don't need to spank".
Then that should be easy to study and such studies should show that. But the only study presented so far said that is was better than some non-spanking strategy but not all.
Okay, I'll grant that studies on every permutation of spanking have not been conducted and in truth it is always impossible to rule out every confounding factor.
But in your specific case how was spanking effective?
As a trait, sure, but we're talking about inducement when we're talking about spanking, so that isn't the relevant nominal sense.Discipline as a noun, a trait, is very different from punishment and a general positive quality.
As a trait, sure, but we're talking about inducement when we're talking about spanking, so that isn't the relevant nominal sense.
Discipline as a noun, a trait, is very different from punishment and a general positive quality.
'Discipline' to mean spanking seems to be a straight euphemism for punishment.
Right, I just want to clarify that it isn't only the verb that implies punishment. A state of discipline implies punishment, too.Which is why I wrote the second sentence of my post.
How do you know how well your techniques would work with someone else's child?
Again, it really depends on the child, the punishment, the situation. I don't think one can say that physical punishment works or doesn't work, full stop. It works sometimes, with some children.
Aversion to pain and punishment is one thing, but with moderation.
I learned that there are consequences to your actions. Getting told "no" is one thing, but I had taken things too far, and that was the penalty. To be clear: the spanking didn't wound me physically, but it was humbling, which was the whole point.
Because I have their kid in my class for about 8 hours a day, and I manage to keep them under control using my classroom management techniques.
That being said, after teaching for 16 years, you become pretty expert on effective non-corporal punishment, so it's expecting a lot out of parents to be as good at discipline as a teacher who's been doing it for a long time. I was spanked a couple of times, when I was doing something that could have got me killed. It didn't warp me.
Then you teach white-bread children.
I've taught white-bread children, It's easy, and it's why jobs in white-bread schools are so hard to find - because teachers there know how well they've got it.
On the other hand, I'd like to see how well you'd do with a classroom of poor blacks and latinos backed by nothing but an equally screwed up and infantalized Administrative Staff. You know...the typical poor, minority American School.