General Articles

PUNISHMENTS

BOON OR BANE? How good is it?

Punishment as a word evokes fear and repulsion. In fact, it is the most misunderstood and emotionally explosive of the behaviour modification techniques. And yet when used in education, it has only positive purposes. It is an intervention used to decrease the frequency of or eliminate inappropriate behaviours. As such there are varied opinions about its desirability as a teaching technique.

Wood and Lakin (1978) researchers in behaviour management in the classroom give several reasons for avoiding the use of punishment: * It does not eliminate but merely suppresses the behaviour.
* It does not provide a model for the desired acceptable behaviour
* Aggression on the part of the practitioner presents an undesirable model.
* The emotional result of punishments may be fear, tension stress, or withdrawal.

In addition, physical punishment may result in physical harm to the child, although such harm is unplanned.

Punishment in the perception of the punished child is frequently associated with the punisher rather than with the unacceptable behaviour. As a result, the punished child’s reaction may be avoidance and dislike of the punisher rather than that the student is enabled to realize that in every punishment meted out, the intention is only to change some unacceptable behaviour and not to placate the teacher.

SICK SCHOOL

Recently papers reported how in the US a schoolboy was forced to wear a woman’s wig, skirt as punishment for talking in class while his teacher looked on and laughed. Teacher Pauline Williamson’s punishment left seventh-grader Caleb Guerrier with psychological damage and other personal injuries.: They were laughing at me, the whole class,” the 13-year old boy said in a telephone interview. He said Williamson “was making jokes and teaching the class. When I was crying, she said, what is that dog sound?” While students actually forced Guerrier into the clothing, Williamson directed the April 24 assault.

A $22.5 million lawsuit has been filed against the school. The hearing is on and the judgment awaited.
(The Telegraph, Calcutta, 25th May, 1995)
WHEN THE PUNISHMENT EDUCATIVE?

A punishment is educative when it teaches the student the need for changed behaviour. For this to happen a few conditions are necessary:
1. Punishment must not stem from the vindictive or angry feeling of the teacher or other authority. It is nothing to do with feelings at all but should be seen as a logical consequence of rule breaking.
2. When rules are broken, the teacher will not have to pose as a flouted authority; that is to play into the hands of the pupils’ own immaturity. Our pupils have to lean that rules and punishments are necessary, not because adults want them, but because any form of human life logically requires them.
3. Frame a contract together with students as far as possible. So they know that for specific misbehaviour specific punishments would naturally follow. This wold also makes the punishment somewhat impersonal. It would be sad if the students were to pretend that punishment is just ‘them’, the authorities, taking it out on ‘us’, the pupils.

DON BOSCO

This well-known educationist of the 19th century was more a practitioner than a theorist. He has written only a few pages on education of which only few lines are on punishments. We reproduce it here in full.
1. An educator should seek to win the love of his pupils if he washes to inspire fear in them. When he succeeds in doing this, the withholding of some token of kindness is a punishment which stimulates emulation, gives courage and never degrades.
2. With the young, punishment is whatever is meant as a punishment. It has been noticed that in the case of some boys a reproachful like in more effective than a slap in the face would be. Praise of work well done and blame in the case of carelessness are already a reward or punishment.
3. Except in very rare cases, corrections and punishments should never be given publicly, but always privately and in the absence of companions; and the greatest prudence and patience should be used to bring the pupil to see his fault, with the aid of reason and religion.
4. To strike a boy in any way, to make him kneel in a painful position, to pull his ears, and other similar punishments, must be absolutely avoided, because the law forbids them, and because they greatly imitate the boys and degrade the educator.
5. The authority shall make sure that the disciplinary measures, including rules and punishments, are known to the pupils, so that no one can make the excuse that he did not know what was commanded or forbidden.

RAPPORT - THE ALTERNATIVE

‘Punishments are actually a defeat for the teacher’, says Mr. Frederick Gomes, a teacher for more than twenty years, ‘for it demonstrates that the teacher has failed to maintain rapport with the students. If rapport is there, then punishments become irrelevant. ...Sometimes of course the class may not exhibit the so-called perfect discipline, (which is more like the discipline of the graveyard) but certainly there will not be indiscipline.”

‘Rapport invites participation, and the few lightheaded ones will ultimately fall in line’, he says. ‘What a teacher needs a lot more of is humour ...Among the different kinds of punishments, the physical is usually forgotten by the students in course of time. But tongue-lashing is never forgotten. Nor even forgiven. And the greatest failure for a teacher is not to be forgiven by a student. The only way is to go to him/her and apologize, feels Gomes.

COOL MRS. N.G.

Mrs. N.G. who teaches inn prestigious hill school has sent us the following anecdote: “It happened in 1989. the spoilt son of a wealthy man, well known for his mischievous ways entered my house with his father. The angry father scolded him in front of me for his carelessness and inattention. When he had finished, I asked him permission to speak to the boy alone. When he had gone out, I patted the boy gently and told him, ‘I know you are a capable boy. One day you will be somebody great. I am sure of it. Don’t take your father’s words too seriously’. These words really worked like magic. Every day from then on he used to tell me, ‘Miss I want to become an Engineer’. It is true. He is now doing Electronics Engineering.”

What does Mrs. N.G. think about indiscipline students? ‘I tell myself “After all they are children, I should not be harsh with them”. This thought helps her do whatever is best, she says.

DID YOU KNOW?

More and more educationists are studying how indiscipline can be prevented rather than corrected. They have found that reforming students after it has occurred is often too painful, time-consuming and not one bit more advantageous to the student. Some call this method Positive School Discipline.

If punishment is to be used, The following guidelines Could help:
Specify and communicate the punishable behavior to the children while discussing classroom rules for behavior.
Post the rules where the children can see them; review them with the group frequently.
Models of acceptable behavior should be presented.
Immediate application of the punishment, without dilly dallying.
Be consistent in the way punishments are given bothers with respect to the students as well as the nature of the behaviour. Nothing makes punishments ineffective as much as whimsical decisions/favoritisms.

A Punishment has to accomplish More than itself, in order to be educative. Questions for discussion

1. What behaviours of students are acceptable/unacceptable?
2. What disciplinary procedures do you think have the most chance of success?
3. Do you think there are any ways your school could improve its approach to discipline?
4. If your child were experiencing discipline problems at school how would you like to be involved?