Long Term Effects Of Corporal Punishment

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The use of Corporal Punishment to discipline children remains one of the last holdouts of old-fashioned childrearing in the United States. Corporal punishment is considered an ineffective and detrimental punishment method that not only undermines the development of a child but can lead to short and long-term effects. Corporal punishment does nothing more than put fear in children and teach them that when someone does something wrong, that person deserves to be put in pain. The fact of using aggression as a teaching method should be of no surprise that aggression will be the learning outcome. Several studies have determined that Corporal punishment is consistently associated with numerous other negative outcomes for children. The evidence …show more content…
The term corporal punishment is sometimes used to describe physical discipline such as slapping or spanking. The common theme behind corporal punishment is that it involves intentionally causing physical pain as a punishment and method of changing a child’s behavior. The Corporal Punishment imposed on children is not isolated to just within the home. Approximately 28 states allow Corporal Punishment in public and private schools giving teachers and other authorized caregivers the right to physically discipline children by spanking, paddling, and other means to deliberately inflict pain in order to punish a child. These forms of corporal punishment may be administered so long as these disciplinary actions are not shown to be cruel and intentionally …show more content…
Base on the severity of physical punishment, it is common to see corporal punishment escalate into battering or that the punishment will cross the line to child abuse. Many parents were abused themselves as children, and in the long run, the best evidence indicates that children and adolescents subjected to corporal punishment are more likely to grow up to abuse their own children or spouses. According to studies, the intended impact created by corporal punishment is reversed in the long run. In extreme cases, corporal punishment results to anger, resentment, and worst children just repeat the cycle of violence to themselves and to others (Gershoff: 545). For example, the child could channel the aggression by bullying their classmates in school. As children witness their authority figures or parents imposing corporal Punishment, these children are encouraged to resort to violence. The end result is that we are harming our children by teaching them that violence is acceptable. In reality, children who are inflicted of pain in the form of spanking and slapping have shown the highest tendencies of suffering from mental health