- 4,035
- Gothenburg
- Agremont
So they act out even more?
I can't see that happening in other than extreme cases. In which case it's probably a good idea to look for help.
So they act out even more?
I can't see that happening in other than extreme cases. In which case it's probably a good idea to look for help.
So as long as it's done with restraint (how much btw) it cannot be violence?
You can grab/carry away/ignore and pretend to leave them etc. The list goes on. I still fail to see the need to smack them.
You bring up some valid points MarinaDiamandis, I will consider them.
It just doesn't work that way. I was hit when I was a kid, sometimes pretty hard for stupid stuff I did. Now I thank them for hitting me.
Not in the case of physical discipline done correctly. Using the word violent to describe it is trying to paint it as uncontrolled and harmful to the recipient, of which it is the complete opposite.
If hitting someone in the adult world because they did something you don't like will land you in jail, why is it that so many people think that the same thing shouldn't apply to kids. It's ok to hit our kids because they're kids. It's not ok to hit adults because they're adults. It doesn't make much sense to me.
My mother's-side grandfather never lay a finger on any one of his 11 children, my father's side grandfather hit his children as a means of punishment. Today my mother's side family is as loving and caring for each other as they come while my father's side family is entangled in legal problems and have had violent exchanges between each other as adults.
If hitting someone in the adult world because they did something you don't like will land you in jail,
Causing physical pain to another human being is violence. Even incarceration or deprivation is classified as violence.
Physical punishment will not stop misbehavior. Not until it gets to the point where children actively fear their parents, which is an unhealthy relationship and affects the way those children will interact with their life partners and their own children when they grow older.
"Misbehavior" for children is not voluntary. As you have said, children misbehave when they are bored or seeking attention. They also misbehave because they do not have a full understanding of the consequences of their actions, they have a lack of impulse control and they have a lack of boundaries.
It's really a case of setting the proper boundaries and strictly implementing them. Prevention. Once you are forced to apply deprivation punishment, that means that you have failed at prevention and need to take remedial steps. If you feel the need to apply physical punishment, that means you have failed the test of patience and are propagating the stereotype that all "misbehaviour" requires physical punishment.
Children who are spanked are more likely to hit other children, and to internalize that behaviour when grown up.
When kids steal someones car, go joy riding, and destroy the car why should they be treated as minors and be let off scott free?
Make no sense as it just says you can do it again and you will not get in trouble.
Those kids need to be sent off to a juvenile facility. That is way past the point where parents should be allowed to continue doing their job. They've already failed.
You call the police if they're vandalizing your property or something of the sort.
Failed because they didnt care or couldn't really discipline them, telling them NO! doesn't work, look at Kim Jong Un, everyone is telling him to calm the farm down be he isn't, what hope do parents have against a child who is hard to control.
Also most likely thing to happen to those kids is, parents foot the bill and the juvenile gets a good behavior bond.
Police do not care about someone vandalizing your property, by the time they respond the damage has been done and you are left to foot the bill.
What? What does Kim Jong Un have to do with anything at all?
and they can still send their kids to a detention facility if they want to.
Defending yourself and your property is one thing (hint, you're still gonna have to foot the bill), but you don't go around beating people or fighting them as punishment for the things they do. The notion is just absurd.
You thank them because they conditioned you to believe hitting children is okay? Because that's all that that accomplished.
[Causing physical pain to another human being is violence. Even incarceration or deprivation is classified as violence.
Children who are spanked are more likely to hit other children, and to internalize that behaviour when grown up.
Once you get to the point where physical punishment is the only resort, that's a failure of parenting...
What does that have a to with a world leader? I don't understand. He isn't a child.Saying "No" and only "No" doesn't work.
What about when they get out?
I've been around kids before and after they go to juvenile center's, they rarely change. It's the same thing with adult's, sure some get straightened out by their "time out" in jail but most end up back there(I think it's like 60% in the U.S.).
So if someone was in the act of vandalizing your property you would just stand there? What about if they were robbing you? What if a group of people were beating someone up, would you just stand there or would you try to break it up?
At that point, they need serious help. No amount of talking tos or beatings are going to stop children who are stealing cars.
calling the cops.
And here, with respect, is utter hogwash. If a parent strikes the kid for every misstep, then you may have a point. But if a spanking is a last resort, and just one tool in the "upbringing toolbox", no such stereotype gets propagated.
And that, I believe is an over-generalization. While true in some cases, I don't think it's necessarily true when spanking is part of a measured response.
Why is that a bad thing? Not all children who are spanked/smacked grow up into monsters, so it's obviously not the hitting alone that causes them to turn out like that.
Again I disagree, pointing to myself as Exhibit "A". I learned at an early age that if I got too far out of line the response would be painful. This does not mean I was spanked for the slightest transgression. It does mean if my behavior was sufficiently awful there would be retribution.
Although I agree with the first sentence, I flatly reject the second. That's the kind of thing you hear from the "any form of punishment is evil" crowd.
So a doctor giving a child a shot is violence? Medical professionals are being violent towards babies! Oh, the humanity!
Source?
Again, opinion, not fact.
You do have a point here except for the first sentence, but on the other hand kids will learn when bribery works. An example is the kid who throws a tantrum in the store until his parent buys that toy he wants, or a treat of some sort. Not that it's a deliberately calculated action for the most part, but it does have a purpose.
One thing that hasn't been mentioned in this entire thread, though, is a very important principle. DO NOT discipline a child while you're angry at them. The more severe the punishment you're considering, the more time you should reflect on what you're contemplating. That doesn't mean you should wait a half a day particularly with a younger child, but you really need to cool down and wait for the heat of the moment to pass before reacting.
I am a special education teacher, and we took this up in school long ago. It's supported in study and the science is sound, but if you'd like sources, there are quite a few out there:
http://www.neverhitachild.org/areview.html
http://www.apa.org/monitor/2012/04/spanking.aspx
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/02/120206122447.htm
http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/health/story/2012-06-28/spanking-mental-problems/55964610/1
Opinion based on science. Basically, once you get to the point where you feel that corporal punishment is the only resort, it's time to step back and re-evaluate the situation and see what else you could have done.
Thank you, even though I am for smacking/spanking, I still think that avoiding those situations is the most important.
It's interesting that you brought up the subject of smacking/spanking being illegal in Sweden as, in my experience, Scandinavian children seem to be much better behaved than British children. I could be wrong.
Thank you, very interesting. I have read about similar studies before, but obviously personal experience has skewed what I took from them. I have grown up around physical discipline, coming from a big family and having lots of cousins, and not one of us has shown any negative effect from being disciplined in that way. Over such a large group I find it odd that not one has been negatively effected by it.
So what else can be done, in your experience, once a child has become borderline uncontrollable? Let's say that you're out shopping in public, and the child is throwing a huge tantrum - how would you deal with this? Or is it a case of prevention alone?
As I have never raised a child from the day that they were born (I don't have a child of my own but have been very involved with raising my friends daughter since she was only a few years old), I have never met a child raised in the way that I would raise one of my own. Oddly, physical discipline would not be part of that upbringing!
Would it be too much to say that the bad behaviour that my friends daughter exhibits (albeit very rarely) might have already been established before I started playing a part in her life? Or will bad behaviour manifest itself in certain situations, no matter how the child was brought up?