Dennis Young
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I agree Lizzie. That's a good idea. I also blame the entertainment media as well.
When I went to school, "swats" were always available if we stepped too far out of line. And I saw them administered by 1 teacher or principal always with an adult witness. And I received them once myself. And we all survived and nobody was injured beyond their pride.
And if we got paddled at school, there was every bit the possibility that we would get in trouble again once we got home. There was next to zero chance that our parents would go roaring up to the school and raise hell with the teacher or principal that we had gotten punished (or threaten to sue).
If ya ask me, the removal of corporate punishment from schools can be credited as a giant step leading to the chaos that has become public school environments today.
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When I went to school, "swats" were always available if we stepped too far out of line. And I saw them administered by 1 teacher or principal always with an adult witness. And I received them once myself. And we all survived and nobody was injured beyond their pride.
And if we got paddled at school, there was every bit the possibility that we would get in trouble again once we got home. There was next to zero chance that our parents would go roaring up to the school and raise hell with the teacher or principal that we had gotten punished (or threaten to sue).
If ya ask me, the removal of corporate punishment from schools can be credited as a giant step leading to the chaos that has become public school environments today.
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Today, under zero tolerance policies those kids would have been expelled from school, no questions, particularly a student who injured a teacher and a fellow student with a weapon. None of these students were. Now, did they use corporal punishment on these students? Probably. But if they did, it certainly didn't stop a string of hugely inappropriate student behavior.
My wife’s former teacher, who she has kept contact with through all these years, had some horrible tales to tell as well. This was teaching in ghetto schools though. She had a meat cleaver thrown at her one time! It stuck in the classroom piano! There were plenty more along those lines too. Guns, knives, explosives---you name it. :doh: This was in the 80s through 2000. It only got worse as time went along….
I'll bet they had access to tv though.This all brings to mind an incident I remember from about the sixth grade -- there was a knot of boys who took to carrying knives, which in itself was not uncommon at the time, a lot of kids had a pocket knife of some kind. But these boys called themselves the "Scar Gang," and began using the knives, not just to threaten kids at recess and committ the occasional armed robbery on the playground, but also to gouge a big gash onto the backs of their left hands as a symbol of their little club. Several of these gashes became rather gruesomely infected, and while nobody actually got gangrene as a result, it brought the whole knife situation to the attention of the school administration. Nobody was expelled or suspended, but a notice was sent home to all parents and, officially, that was the end of knife-carrying in M. S. A. D. #56.
(It should be noted that none of these boys had hippie parents, or even hippie older siblings. There were no known hippies in our town until several years after this incident occured.)
sheeplady;1912933 On the flip side said:Yeah, there’s some truth in that. I’m reminded of a recent case where a little boy (around 6 to 8 I think) was suspended for using his fingers to make it like a pistol.
That’s just ignorant imo. The teacher and the Principal should both be hauled up before the board of education in that case.
My mom was a teacher for 35 years and also an assistant principal. I had two aunts also who retired from teaching. We went to a little rural school and, other than the occasional fist fight on the play ground, there really was no trouble to speak of.
OTOH, the news is filled with incidents where kids run wild today. Complete disrespect for authority. Violence. And the teachers often complain they cant do a thing about it because they’ll get sued or fired.
Now…kids are kids. The kids of my day are just as human as any other era. So why are kids acting the way they do, with the frequency and over-the-top violence they are today, as opposed to my era? Were my teachers just super teachers? I really don’t think so.
I'll bet they had access to tv though.
Well said,DY.
HD
My biggest problem with the hippies is that they weren't *real* revolutionaries -- they were nothing but spoiled middle-class children play-acting at being radicals. The real radicals of the thirties would have chewed them up and spit them out.
I don't have any use for hippie culture. I think rock music is a travesty, I think drugs and the modern drug culture are by far the worst thing to come out of the twentieth century, and I think sex is the most overrated subject in the universe. But I also think that simply "blaming the hippies" for everything that's not the way it was when you were a kid yourself gives short shrift to the factors which actually created the hippies themselves. Either the parenting skills of the WW2 generation left a lot to be desired, or American schools in the 1950s and 1960s weren't doing their job -- because those were the spouts out of which the hippie generation flowed.
I don't watch much contemporary television, because I have better ways of spending my time. Reality programs are a pointless waste of time, but so were the formula sitcoms and trite filmed dramas of sixties television. There were a few gems among the dross, just as there are today, but in general, television has *always* been a waste of time. (But that doesn't stop the Lounge from having a very active "What Was The Last TV Show You Watched? thread.)
Well, we'll just have to have a friendly disagreement. I blame the hippie culture for nearly all the ills of society today (excluding terrorism from other parts of the world that is).