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JEFFERSONVILLE, Ga. (AP) Twiggs County principals will be pulling out their dusty paddles when school resumes and using them when students act up.

At least that's the school system's aim. The Twiggs County school board reinstated its corporal punishment policy this summer to allow students to be spanked to curb misbehavior.

Some board members felt that in many cases, detention for students or a scolding wasn't working.

``We had a policy but we weren't using it,'' said Ethel Stanley, one of the board's five members. ``Sometimes smaller kids will obey better if they have a paddling. The more you give them rope, the more they try.

``It's something to deter them,'' she said.

Last year, Twiggs County schools reported more than 300 student misconduct incidents and 62 fights, according to a state report. The system has about 1,100 students.

At least two board members said student discipline problems are also a factor in higher-than-normal teacher turnover this past school year, and officials are trying ways to improve

student achievement. Most of the system's source of misbehavior comes from middle schoolers, said Levi Rozier, Twiggs County's campus police chief.

``That's when they're finding themselves,'' Rozier said.

But for the deterrent to work, teachers and principals will need to be consistent when correcting students' behavior, and parents will have to accept the change, he said.

``It has to be bought in by parents,'' he said.

Twiggs parents will have to sign a permission slip for their child to be paddled by an administrator, and witnesses will have to be in the room, Stanley and board member Johnnie Moore said. There also will be a meeting to inform parents of the changes, Stanley said.

Experts and education officials even those in the midstate are divided on whether paddling actually deters misbehavior.

Murray Straus, co-director of the Family Research Laboratory and a professor of sociology at the University of New Hampshire, said children who are spanked are more likely to be physically aggressive or become juvenile delinquents.

Others in the field claim that spanking a child can be effective in some cases for those who repeatedly misbehave and for whom nothing else works.

Twenty-eight states have banned corporal punishment in schools, although Georgia allows school systems to decide whether to use it.

``It's a hotly debated issue,'' said Sharon Patterson, superintendent of the Bibb County school system. ``We do use corporal punishment, but it can't be used as a first line of discipline.''

It's also up to the discretion of principals, and parents can opt out if they choose.

In Bibb County, principals at Hutchings Career Center, Central High, Union Elementary and Taylor Elementary schools say they prefer not to spank students.

Principals at Westside High, Howard Middle and Skyview Elementary, however, say they use corporal punishment when they need to.

Lynne Donahoo, Burghard Elementary School's principal, says she paddles students sparingly - and never on special education students or those younger than first grade.

Last school year, she used corporal punishment just a handful of times, including on a second-grader for throwing pencils and for others with chronic misbehavior for whom time out and counseling did not work.

``Sometimes these little ones are hard headed and you have to show them you mean business,'' Donahoo said. ``I haven't used it often, but I have used it.''

The Houston County school system does not allow its faculty members to paddle students.

``Corporal punishment is not an appropriate means of discipline in Houston County schools,'' said Robin Hines, assistant superintendent for school operations.

``We have a great deal of confidence in our progressive discipline procedures that utilize classroom strategies as well as schoolwide procedures that include detention, in-school suspension and home suspension.''

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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What others are saying

  • Corporal Punishment
    "Spare the rod, spoil the child." Scripture's age-old advice still applies today.
  • I work in the school system and the kids think detention is a joke. They know the school will not do anything to them. I think it's a great idea
  • Regarding Truth and Logic 7/21/08 8:55:46 a.m.

    "...those that beat don't teach." Humm, beat? That's a bit of an exaggeration, don't you think? I didn't see the word beat anywhere in the above article. "Redneck"? You insult an awful lot of people with that wide sweeping assumption. I am tired of our public school teachers and kids that want to learn having to put up with and tolerate inappropriate behavior day in and day out. The teachers are exhausted. That's the real reason why they have problems teaching.
  • Truth & Logic needs a paddlin'
    Correlation may not mean causation. But then again, you may be too smart to realize that.
  • Parents not the kids are to blame!
    This seems like a good idea and at least they are trying to improve behavior at their school. The real problem is that these kids are not taught to respect their teachers at home. When I was in school kids got paddled but they also got in big trouble at home. Parents want to be friends instead of parents and leave discipline to the teachers. If teachers and parents do not unite to improve behavior, every program they enact will have limited success.
  • KUDOS TO TWIGGS COUNTY!!
    One of the major problems in public education today is that there are no punishments. Taxpayers pay an enormous amount for 'school administrators' but yet, indiscipline continues to go up. The vast majority of administrators standby with their 'hands in their pockets', and in the mean time, kids are intimidated (at best) and do not learn.
    The so called progressives have set public education back at least two generations for their passive behavior -- and the kids know it!
  • Paddling
    Let’s paddle the confident progressives
  • Tail warming
    Paddling
    If more parents would step up to the plate regarding discipline, our school system wouldn't have to. I earned every school paddling and belt whip'in I ever got. Thank you to those who shaped my character.
    By monkeyspankin

    +1 Same here. It's a good thing, silly 'time out's' do no good.
  • Paddling
    If more parents would step up to the plate regarding discipline, our school system wouldn't have to. I earned every school paddling and belt whip'in I ever got. Thank you to those who shaped my character.
  • The People of Limited Intelligence Live!
    There is a correlation between those states that have banned corporal punishment and higher test scores. IN other words, those that beat don't teach. But, then again, the truth has a nasty way of sneaking up on a good redneck argument. Nothing more need be said.
  • Good ole fashion trip to the wood shed! It's about time. I think the school boards pulled coporal punishment for fear of being shot by some teenage punk... Maybe more systems will follow Twiggs County.
  • School Paddling
    I grew up in a school system that allowed paddling - IT WORKS!!!! PArnets who don't but into it are only asking for problems later on. I say Good Move to the the Twiggs County school board. A group that finally wants to take the schools back from the students.
  • Paddling in Twiggs County, GA
    Finally a local government has taken a step in the right direction. We the People are too afraid of "Political Correctness" these days. In the mean time our society is falling apart at the seams due to a lack of moral boundaries. When kids behave badly, they are just begging for discipline and sometimes that requires spanking. I'm contemplating moving to Twiggs County.
  • School Paddling
    The great majority of those who were paddled at school can attest that even though it was unpleasant at the time that it was not abusive and that it DID contribute to the better order of both the school and the kid. I spent lots of time behaving and therefore listening and learning because I knew, for sure, that the paddle would come out and be used if I didn't. Twiggs is making a smart move. The only smarter move would have been to never remove it in the first place. If they will establish a solid base of discipline so that they have the order and attention of the kids, then they can work on the things that they need to do to improve their academics.

    I'm sure that in this situation those who attended a school and were never subject to the paddle will raise the cry that it's ineffective, does not work, and is child abuse, while those who were subject to it will note that it seemed to work quite well. Do you recall being in a room when it was starting to get a little rowdy and the teacher would open the drawer and pull out the paddle and lay on the desk, and instantaneously silence and order were the rule of the day?
  • paddling
    Seemed to be a deterrant when I attended school, have not heard anything about lingering abuse issues from fellow alumni at reunions. "Attitude adjustments" go a long way these days when teachers are so bound by political correctness that they no longer have control of the learning environment. Go Twiggs!
  • Paddling
    Let's paddle the parents who don't teach the kids respect.
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