The DeSoto School District Paddled Students 227 Times Last Year, but Won't Say How or Why

PaddlingCorporalPunishment.jpg
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A similar scene takes place in the DeSoto High School principal's office.
The internet has gone wild over the past few days with news that Adrian Peterson of the Minnesota Vikings is facing child abuse charges after disciplining his 4-year-old son with a switch, and was separately accused of leaving a scar on another 4-year-old son's face. A native of Palestine, Texas, Peterson's charge has spurred an impassioned debate between corporal punishment advocates and fierce opponents. But in nearby DeSoto ISD, the practice is a long-standing tradition, and one that is shied away from public eyes.

See also: Star-Telegram's Mac Engel Says Adrian Peterson Just Got a Little Carried Away

Last school year, DeSoto ISD administered corporal punishment 227 times. DISD spokeswoman Beth Trimble points out that some of those kids were repeat offenders, so the actual number of children paddled is unclear. Nevertheless, the incident is indicative of a continuing trend across Texas public schools for corporal punishment. According to Dr. George Holden, a psychologist and family violence researcher at SMU, Texas leads the nation in cases of corporal punishment.

"The most common reason parents approve is that it was done to them as children. They turned out okay, so they do it to their kids. It's an easy technique to use to get immediate behavior change from the child," says Holden. Still, specific data is often unclear for the number of kids physically punished in Texas schools. "It's also something that school districts don't want to advertise or draw attention to," says Holden. "And students are embarrassed."

DeSoto ISD's official policy on corporal punishment breaks down the system, yet the details remain shrouded in ambiguity. The policy applies to all grades, but how many kindergartners are paddled versus high schoolers? Is a paddle used, or a switch, or a hand? Where is the child hit -- the backside, the hand, or the back of the legs? DeSoto ISD officials declined to comment on policy specifics.

  1. Corporal punishment shall be administered only after less other stringent measures such as counseling, parental conferences, and other forms of discipline have failed to produce the desired results, unless the conduct of a student is of such an extreme nature that corporal punishment is the only reasonable form of discipline under the circumstances.
  2. Corporal punishment may be administered by the school principal or a designated school official.
  3. The instrument to be used in administering corporal punishment shall be approved by the principal.
  4. When corporal punishment is administered it shall be done in the presence of another district professional employee and shall take place in the principal's office or other such place as is out of view of other students.
  5. A disciplinary record shall be maintained and shall contain the name of the Record the student, the type of misconduct, any previous disciplinary actions, the type of corporal punishment administered, the name of the person administering the punishment, the names of witnesses present, and the date and time of punishment.

"We do not use corporal punishment lightly -- parents are contacted prior to each administration for verbal consent on top of the written permission that is required every year," DISD Superintendent Dr. David Harris said in a statement. "We feel there are times, situations and age appropriate considerations that can make this discipline method effective. We elect, as allowed by law, to keep all options available to redirect inappropriate behavior."

But Holden says such arguments are antiquated, and harmful. "More enlightened educators realize it's ineffective and counterproductive," he says. "When you're disciplining a child or student, you want them to change their behavior in the future. So they need to be motivated to change their behavior in the future, and by hitting the child, it's painful and it hurts for perhaps a few minutes, but it doesn't at all affect the way they're going to behave in the future. It makes them angry, and in some cases they want to retaliate. They're humiliated."

Often, like parents, educators will be in favor of corporal punishment because it was used on them as children, and is seen as the appropriate technique to use. But too often, corporal punishment disproportionately affects black children and children with disabilities. "Some educators think that's the way to get through to children with disabilities," says Holden. "And it may be different reasons, but I think [African-American] are more discriminated against. Their parents may also be more apt to give permission to schools to use corporal punishment. And it could be the school personnel are African-American. There is evidence that African-Americans are more in favor of using corporal punishment, both in attitude and reported use."

Holden referred specifically to a number of studies that point to the discrepancy. "Part of it can be educational. Those that have more education are less likely to find corporal punishment acceptable," he says. "There also seems to be more of a tradition for physical punishment in African-American groups, and some would argue that's from slave heritage."

It's not known exactly how -- or for that matter, why -- the district paddles its students, despite the practice's discontinuance in most other north Texas districts. As is typical of districts that have paddle policies, Dallas ISD was reluctant to provide much information. But Holden says the same techniques are generally applied across the state. "Generally it's administered by either the principal or assistant principal and in the witness of someone else," he says. "The child will bend over the table and will be hit with the paddle, usually several times. It's humiliating and embarrassing, and it's intended to be painful. From what I've seen and heard, they put their weight into it."

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47 comments
joemaxwell2055
joemaxwell2055

Absolutely outrageous! The school tyrants that beat our young people need to be continually exposed by the media,  and it doesn't matter if the parents or President Obama himself approves of the violence. Shame on DeSoto ISD and the other backward Texas hypocritical school districts that preach non-violence and anti-bullying on the one hand, and beat young human beings with the other with their wooden weapons. Time to get with the rest of the country in the 21st century and stop this archaic violence in our public educational institutions.

JulieWorley
JulieWorley

WATCH 3 min. trailer for Documentary Movie "The Board of Education" by Jared Abrams Exposing Violent Pain Punishment of children, even against parents' wishes, in Public Schools based on where they live, protected by law https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0vt4v7KsFi8

20,000 children seek emergency medical treatment from school corporal pain punishment each year.  Proposed Federal bill H.R. 5005 "The Ending Corporal Punishment in Schools Act" is languishing in Congress NOW for the 3rd time thanks to U.S. House Education Committee Chairman John Kline's R-MN belief that our nation's children's constitutional rights to equal protection against assault in school is a "States' Rights Issue"! http://hrw.org/reports/2008/08/19/violent-education-0 … … …

Every 20 seconds of the school day, a child is beaten by an educator. Every 4 minutes, an educator beats a child so severely that she seeks medical attention. According to conservative reporting to the U.S. Department of Education 223,190 students were the victims of institutionalized violence at least once in the 2006-2007 school year, of which over 20,000 sought medical attention. [source: Office for Civil Rights at the US Dept. of Education; Congressional Testimony] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/anthony-adams/223190-kids-legally-beate_b_559428.html

7/17/2014 USATODAY: "As more schools ban paddling, others defend it"
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/07/17/school-district-ban-paddling-rural-ar eas-defend/12421465/?siteID=je6NUbpObpQ-2SEPz24l_iHlt9LBNmsTLQ
 
Top 5 states for corporal punishment in schools
Mississippi ... 41,146 (students paddled).
Texas .... 37,290.
Alabama ... 30,061.
Arkansas ... 24,490.
Tennessee ... 16,645.
Source: Department of Education's Civil Rights Data Base, 2009-2010

Child Abuse in Schools Protected by Law with tacit approval of Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court 3/2014 Federal Appeals Court Rejects Latest Corporal Punishment Challenge http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/school_law/2014/03/appeals_court_rejects_latest_c.html?r=17

Please join 6,000+ by Signing and Sharing Petition Congress to End Corporal Pain Punishment of Children in Schools HR 5005 http://chn.ge/QaERCo

mcdallas
mcdallas

PLEASE, fellow commenters, UNDERSTAND!   If you use ALL CAPS you are MUCH MORE LIKELY to win your argument!  Also, use LOTS of exclamation marks.  They help TONS!!!!

RealTexan
RealTexan

I fully support corporal punishment. YES we did have it in school when I was growing up, and YES it DID work. The only problem I see here is that the paddling is done in private.  I think corporal punishment (as well as the death penalty) should be administered IN PUBLIC as a deterrent to others.  Embarrassment and humiliation are also strong deterrents.  When I was in school the coach administered "licks" in front of the class. 

Charlie
Charlie

I'm getting really sick of being told that the only solutions to all of society's problems are to hit, to hurt, to harass, and to kill.

DonkeyHotay
DonkeyHotay topcommenter

The DeSoto School District Paddled Students 227 Times Last Year

Child Abusing SCUM!

bulldurham48
bulldurham48

I guess I am too old and old school on this. I have never seen or heard of anyone in any southern school system [Alabama ] that was injured by getting their ass paddled for reason in school. I have observed and experienced a definite change in actions and attitudes after a paddling though. Those who received the paddling were far less likely to commit the same offense again and who actually warn others of the experience. It was especially effective when administered in front of the entire class room. The humiliation and pain were enough to correct the problem in the offender and many others who observed  the paddling. The paddling never caused anything but humiliation and a sore ass to the person who received it and since it prevented others from doing the same thing I feel it really worked and had a positive effect.It seems that children/teens who have been exposed to this type of justice the memory is a very lasting and positive one that they will remember the rest of their lives as a positive experience/.  I know that I am 66 years old and can still remember my paddling experience and how it modified my actions and attitude in school and I did not have any lasting injury or damage of any sort and now can remember it and have a good laugh at myself and the teacher who administrated it. And damn how my ass burned and Mr Moreray could really swing that paddle for and old man.

SKZiegler
SKZiegler

Then you have never been "spanked" by a bully vice principal or principal who "puts their bodies into I!"  If they cannot get a child to change a behavior any other way than hitting, the authority figure should not be in that position.

dingo
dingo

'by hitting the child, it's painful and it hurts for perhaps a few minutes, but it doesn't at all affect the way they're going to behave in the future.'

I call bullshit. I have seen/experienced many times when the coach's paddle in grade school and junior high was a predominate point of consideration when deciding on a course of action. 

unclescrappy
unclescrappy

Hey I remember getting licks from the 6th grade on. If they are now filing criminal & civil suits over this, I need to look up a lawyer to get in on some of the easy money, I am sure I can get some people to testify I am not normal & it is because I received corporal punishment when I was a wee little tyke. Just think, I could be another redneck with money. Woo Hoo.

Myrna.Minkoff-Katz
Myrna.Minkoff-Katz topcommenter

Peterson has stated that he "endured a horrific beating at the hands of his father and in front of 20 schoolmates and that he kept him in line and made him a success as a man."  

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

Things could be worse...

Los Angeles Unified School District police officials are considering whether they need the armored vehicle and grenade launchers they received from the U.S. military.

Myrna.Minkoff-Katz
Myrna.Minkoff-Katz topcommenter

Physical punishment is a serious public health problem in the United States, and it profoundly affects the mental health of children and the society in which we live. Studies show that approximately 65% of adults in the United States approve of physical punishment and about 50% of families use physical punishment to discipline children. Yet, research shows that physical punishment is associated with increases in delinquency, antisocial behavior, and aggression in children, and decreases in the quality of the parent-child relationship, children's mental health, and children's capacity to internalize socially acceptable behavior. Adults who have been subjected to physical punishment as children are more likely to abuse their own child or spouse and to manifest criminal behavior.


Spanking is a euphemism for hitting. One is not permitted to hit one's spouse or a stranger; such actions are defined as the crime of assault. Nor should one be permitted to hit a small and more vulnerable child. Hitting a child elicits precisely the feelings one does not want to generate in a child: distress, anger, fear, shame, and disgust. Studies show that children who are hit identify with the aggressor and are more likely to become hitters themselves, that is, bullies and future abusers of their own children and partners. They tend to learn to use violent behavior as a way to deal with stress and interpersonal disputes.---American Psychoanalytic Association 

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

DeSoto is majority black and in the South, so it's likely they're using a "switch", which is described on NPR as a "tree branch", so basically the children are being beaten with sticks.

WTF, when did DeSoto become Kabul?

ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul
ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul topcommenter

Emily, there is a difference between corporal punishment and physical abuse.  I don't think that it is reasonable to compare an ISD corporal punishment policy to that of an incident of child abuse.

joemaxwell2055
joemaxwell2055

@RealTexan I am sure closeted perverts that gravitate to these positions of authority ABSOLUTELY agree with you. In fact they are employed in Texas schools right now and enjoy this. Sick sadistic bullies!

joemaxwell2055
joemaxwell2055

@bulldurham48 Please educate yourself on this to know the physical, mental and sexual harm this has caused people. All professionals and experts have clear documented evidence regarding this, and most of the United States has long moved past this; but there are those that will still not listen. You may be too old as you acknowledge, however to understand this. The adverse way it has affected you is to condone this violence for others. Oh well-out with the old and in with the "New."

RedRaider93
RedRaider93

@SKZiegler You obviously have never dealt with the entitled mentality of many of the youth of today who have been molly-coddled by liberal idiots like yourself who worry more about self-esteem than teaching right and wrong...

DonkeyHotay
DonkeyHotay topcommenter

@SKZiegler ... the position those child abusing scumbags should be in is bent over a prison toilet getting ass-rammed by Bubba

bvckvs
bvckvs topcommenter

@Myrna.Minkoff-Katz 

Domestic abuse victims often talk that way - about how they "deserved" to be beaten and how it made them a better person... and most inexplicably, that they love their abuser for having abused them.


RealTexan
RealTexan

@TheRuddSki yeah, and I'm CERTAIN they have outlawed corporal punishment in Los Angeles long ago.  So much for school discipline. Let's bring in the tanks.

RealTexan
RealTexan

@Myrna.Minkoff-Katz What a crock of liberal claptrap and sociological BS. Most kids are undisciplined because they've never BEEN disciplined and taught self-control. I'm sure the penitentiaries are full of people who sat in the time out chair planning their next shenanigan.  If parents won't discipline, and schools can't discipline, then it's left to the police and the courts to do the disciplining.  Better a paddling than a prison sentence or the death penalty.

RedRaider93
RedRaider93

@Myrna.Minkoff-Katz Bullshit.  Too many kids need their butts whipped and are NOT getting it, which is why the youth of today have no respect and no manners.  Just look at how out of control they are today and anyone with an ounce of sense knows it's the limp-wristed liberal crap you spout that is the problem today!

bvckvs
bvckvs topcommenter

@oakclifftownie 

Running away from a problem is a lousy way to solve a problem.

SKZiegler
SKZiegler

@ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul Then you've never been paddled by a power happy bully vice principal.  child abuse is exactly what it is.  If the authority figure cannot figure out alternatives for misbehaving, he/she should not be in an authoritative position.

bvckvs
bvckvs topcommenter

@ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul 

They're not in trouble for the beatings - they're in trouble because they're keeping secret the information about why they beat kids.

But since it's a predominantly black community, it's understandable that racist scumbags would just assume their children deserve to be beaten.

phillipsjanem
phillipsjanem

@ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul  Are you kidding? Hitting including spanking, whooping and corporal punishment is child abuse.  If you hit an adult it is called assault but do it to your child in the name of love with a belt and it’s called good parenting.  WTF?  Hitting a child in any form is wrong. Every parent I know who spanks their child does it often – proof positive that the technique does not curb unwanted behavior.  I  have two intelligent, well-mannered children who have never been hit.  We teach them with words and by example not with a belt.

bvckvs
bvckvs topcommenter

@WylieH 

Was that confusion, or outrage?  There's not much to be confused about.  This isn't the first time a bunch of black kids were beaten silly, or of a southern community covering it up.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@RichardBR

Traditionalists.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@bvckvs

In 2005, 49.7 percent of children who were maltreated were white (75% of population), 23.1 percent were African American (13% of population)

Looks kinda like blacks are the ones most likely to assume their children deserve to be beaten, perfesser.

Probably because they flunked math.

ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul
ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul topcommenter

@phillipsjanem @ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul 

Yep only an hour.  Didn't think that it would take that long. 

There is a big difference between corporal punishment and physical abuse.


If a child does not respond to logic and reason when they misbehave, what do you propose if they continue to misbehave.


Corporal punishment does not necessarily include the proverbial swat to the rear.  It could include items such as kneeling (a favorite of Catholic schools) or some form of physical exertion such as a set number of deep knee bends, push ups or a long run.


Corporal punishment is a final form of punishment.


As my mother used to say, the quickest way to get a child's attention is through their rear end.  I was not spanked very often as a child, but I did get the message very quickly.

ScottsMerkin
ScottsMerkin topcommenter

That's quite a tantrum, dumbass

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@TPFKAP

There's corporal punishment, major punishment and general punishment, but from what I'm told, Sargent punishment is the worst.

RTGolden1
RTGolden1 topcommenter

@ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul @phillipsjanem Exercise should not be used as a punishment either.  Part of the reason people my age hate to run, is that whenever we jacked around in Gym or sports, we had to 'take a lap'.  We associate running with punishment, not with health benefits or fun.

manpanties
manpanties

@ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul @phillipsjanem

If a child does not respond to logic and reason when they misbehave, what do you propose if they continue to misbehave.


well obviously, when a kid doesn't act like an adult, the adult has no choice but to act like a kid.  thanks for your bravery.

ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul
ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul topcommenter

@manpanties @ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul @phillipsjanem 

nice application of reductio ad absurdum.


Besides it was a question.  Here is the ?.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@TPFKAP

Son tells me why he got religion. At MCRD, it was the only place to escape the DI's.

RTGolden1
RTGolden1 topcommenter

@ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul @RTGolden1 @phillipsjanem Make them do tax tables?  I don't know, really.  Part of being a parent is trying figure out how to best discipline your child.  My choice of corporal punishment was 'face the wall'.  the misbehaving little miscreant had to face the wall, a thumbs length away, and hold their arms straight out to their sides.

this worked until physiology actually worked and the daughter could hold her arms up forever.  She had the audacity to tell me it was nothing, so she got to hold up my muddy jump boots.  She was whining within a minute.

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