Black, disabled kids more often paddled at school

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Where the practice is still legal, corporal punishment in schools is used as much as 50 percent more frequently on children who are African-American or who have disabilities, a new analysis of 160,000 cases during 2013-2014 reports.

Corporal punishment—typically striking a child with a wooden paddle—continues to be a widespread practice in disciplining children in both private and public schools in states across the United States.

“Some Americans may think corporal punishment is as obsolete as the one-room schoolhouse,” says Elizabeth Gershoff, associate professor of human development and family sciences at the University of Texas at Austin. “Yet public school personnel in 19 states—and private school personnel in 48 states—can legally hit children in the name of discipline.”

The new report, published as a Social Policy Report by the Society for Research in Child Development, analyzes data gathered by the Office of Civil Rights of the US Department of Education from all 36,942 public schools in the 19 states where school corporal punishment is legal. The study assessed which school districts are using corporal punishment, and which children are punished using corporal punishment within these public schools.

Widespread disparities

The study found that there are widespread disparities in the administration of corporal punishment by race, gender and disability status. For example:

  • In Alabama and Mississippi, African-American children are at least 51 percent more likely to be corporally punished than white children in over half of school districts.
  • In eight states, boys are five times as likely to receive corporal punishment as girls are in at least 20 percent of school districts.
  • Children with disabilities are more than 50 percent more likely to be corporally punished than their non-disabled peers in many southeastern states.

Disability status is defined as students who qualified as having a disability (physical, cognitive, or emotional) under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.

“We documented that African-American children, children with disabilities, and boys are much more likely to be corporally punished,” Gershoff says. “These disparities violate several federal civil rights laws that prohibit discrimination and suggest hidden biases may factor into which children get paddled at school.”

Preschool teachers keep a closer eye on black boys

The Supreme Court ruled in 1977 that school corporal punishment was constitutional. At that time, only a few states had banned corporal punishment in public schools. Today, 31 states ban it from public schools. Corporal punishment is used to discipline schoolchildren for behaviors ranging from serious incidents such as setting off fireworks in school to minor misbehaviors such as using cellphones and not completing homework.

Juvenile crime has not increased in states that have removed corporal punishment from schools, suggesting that it is possible to find appropriate ways to discipline children in schools that don’t cause physical or emotional harm and, at the same time, don’t result in an increase in crime.

What counts as abuse?

The authors note that whereas hitting an animal to the point of injury is a felony in most US states, hitting a child to the point of injury as punishment in a public school is exempt from child maltreatment laws in some states where corporal punishment in schools is legal.

Will this student graduate? Black and white teachers disagree

In such cases, a behavior that would be considered abuse when inflicted by a parent on a child cannot be prosecuted if inflicted by a school employee. The Society for Adolescent Medicine estimated that in 2003, when more than 270,000 children were corporally punished in schools, 10,000-20,000 children had to seek medical attention as a result of that corporal punishment. This included treatment for bruises, hematomas, broken bones, and nerve and muscle damage.

“Dozens of research studies have confirmed that corporal punishment does not promote better behavior in children,” Gershoff says. “A recent international study found that children subjected to school corporal punishment had lower gains in academic achievement over time.”

The Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development supported the work.

Source: University of Texas at Austin