Are you really suggesting that teachers in disadvantaged schools have to beat their kids to get any sort of discipline?
I'm not even a teacher and I find that offensive. If you really need help with your classroom management so that you can stop hitting the kids in your charge seek out a Love and Logic training course or some other proven system.
As an aside this was interesting in that - I don't know if you can hear it outside the UK.
Six-minute clip
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03pdytm
How to turn your life around
What does it take to succeed if you are born into poverty and neglect? Two people who have done just that explore whether it was down to personality, circumstances or plain luck. Why do so few people manage it?
First broadcast on How to Turn Your Life Around, 29 March 2016.
Full programme:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b074xbs4
The main program visits an inner-city school with an intake that includes gang members, and yet which gets very good academic results.What does it take to succeed if you are born into poverty and neglect? Two people who have done just that explore whether it was down to personality, circumstances or plain luck. Why do so few people manage it?
Byron Vincent, a writer and poet, and Dr Anna Woodhouse, a university lecturer and outreach worker, talk to experts to try and discover if their own triumph over lives that were blighted by abuse, drug addiction, homelessness and hunger could have been predicted. They talk to experts about the sort of traits an individual needs to overcome adversity, things like resilience, grit and will power, and discover the latest thinking on what really helps. They explore the way science is looking at the role of genes in determining character. And they look at the importance of outside forces; education, family support, mentors and the role of the Government. At the end, they discuss what they have found with former Welfare Minister and current Chair of the Work and Pensions Select Committee Frank Field, to see what government can do to help lift individuals out of poverty and get them to turn their lives around.
Producer: Jenny Sneesby.
