View Full Version : Teachers can beat your kids because Florida
pauldun170
04-24-2013, 12:10 PM
Florida county school board votes to resume paddling
Published April 24, 2013
Associated Press
OCALA, Fla. – Elementary school principals will now be able to paddle misbehaving students in Marion County.
The Marion County school board approved the measure Tuesday, three years after banning the practice.
The Ocala Star-Banner reports paddling can only be used in elementary schools if a parent gives a standing written approval once a year. In addition, the principal must receive verbal permission before paddling the child. And a student can be paddled just once a semester.
The newspaper reports that before the practice was banned in 2010, Marion County was one of the largest districts in the state that still used corporal punishment.
The motion to bring back paddling was made by board member Carol Ely, a retired principal who believes it is a good option for discipline.
Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/04/24/florida-county-school-board-votes-to-resume-paddling/#ixzz2ROj5u97U
Particle Man
04-24-2013, 12:23 PM
I'd prefer they just call me if my kid is out of line and grant me the discretion to paddle my own kid's ass.
OneSickPsycho
04-24-2013, 12:55 PM
Marion county... home of race horses and open pasture... something tells me this would be better served in some of the inner city districts...
Riceaholic
04-25-2013, 06:22 AM
There's nothing to fear at home anymore...I say beat their ass in school. If kids were getting their ass beat at home more often they might act a little better while in a classroom...
Ah, no big deal, they have to have parent permission to do it. If you don't like it, don't give them permission.
EpyonXero
04-25-2013, 08:15 AM
Marion county... home of race horses and open pasture... something tells me this would be better served in some of the inner city districts...
Because we all know rich kids are well behaved.
They never stopped paddling in my neck of the swamp:
http://www.npr.org/2012/03/13/148521155/spanking-lives-on-in-rural-florida-schools
OneSickPsycho
04-25-2013, 09:34 AM
Because we all know rich kids are well behaved.
They never stopped paddling in my neck of the swamp:
http://www.npr.org/2012/03/13/148521155/spanking-lives-on-in-rural-florida-schools
Yeah, you're right... the gang problem in suburban America is pretty out of control... must be the low literacy and graduation rates amongst the middle and upper-middle classes.
Cutty72
04-25-2013, 09:09 PM
Ah, no big deal, they have to have parent permission to do it. If you don't like it, don't give them permission.
I have no kids at this point.
When I do, I hereby give any adult the permission to smack my kid if they are being a little brat and annoying the shit out of you, or doing something otherwise to be considered socially unacceptable.
I blame baby boomers, the worst generation in American history. It's funny the greatest generation created them.
fatbuckRTO
04-26-2013, 09:16 AM
I blame baby boomers, the worst generation in American history. It's funny the greatest generation created them.I've never bought Brokaw's characterization here. There were a lot of great people from the Great Depression and WWII era, no question. But consider how they treated they're own children during the Vietnam War (who "the greatest generation" had sent to that place). Consider how they treated women and minorities. Consider how they allowed Hitler to rise to power in the first place, giving him countries as he rose. Consider how they locked up their own fellow citizens by the thousands, for simply looking like one of their enemies. And then how they put men in a position to destroy our entire world with, essentially, the touch of a button.
They endured hardships, but no more so than the colonists who founded our country. They fought a tough war, and won, but no tougher than the wars before their time. But I don't blame people for buying into the idea of "the greatest generation," because they damn sure knew how to give themselves great press:
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/02/07/nyregion/07glennparade.span.jpg
EpyonXero
04-26-2013, 10:16 AM
I've never bought Brokaw's characterization here. There were a lot of great people from the Great Depression and WWII era, no question. But consider how they treated they're own children during the Vietnam War (who "the greatest generation" had sent to that place). Consider how they treated women and minorities. Consider how they allowed Hitler to rise to power in the first place, giving him countries as he rose. Consider how they locked up their own fellow citizens by the thousands, for simply looking like one of their enemies. And then how they put men in a position to destroy our entire world with, essentially, the touch of a button.
They endured hardships, but no more so than the colonists who founded our country. They fought a tough war, and won, but no tougher than the wars before their time. But I don't blame people for buying into the idea of "the greatest generation," because they damn sure knew how to give themselves great press:
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2008/02/07/nyregion/07glennparade.span.jpg
Agreed. Good old nostalgia, the past always seems better than the present and the future always seems worse.
azoomm
04-26-2013, 12:37 PM
Agreed. Good old nostalgia, the past always seems better than the present and the future always seems worse.
Right. And, the past has a funny way of being painted by those that choose to share the tale.
On topic; I am not an advocate for corporal punishment. I have not ever raised a hand (or any other whipping tool) to my children. But, I've come to understand I have taken more time to parent than the average mother today. My children are the greatest inconvenience to my schedule.
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