Dr. Matthew Lynch

Dr. Matthew Lynch
Location
Langston, Oklahoma, USA
Birthday
December 31
Title
Professor
Company
Langston University
Bio
Dr. Lynch is a Chair and Associate Professor of Education at Langston University. He spent seven years as a K-12 teacher, which gave him an intimate view of the impediments that hinder genuine education reform. He has focused the second stage of his career on researching topics related to educational policy, school leadership and education reform, particularly in the urban learning environment. His writings regular appear in the Huffington Post, Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, Education Week, and Education World. Dr. Lynch’s scholarship is intended to make a redoubtable, theoretically and empirically based argument that genuine school reform and the closing of the well-chronicled achievement gap are possible. His research and commentaries have been featured in publications throughout the United States and have centered on issues ranging from school reform to politics. Throughout his career, he has been interested in developing collaborative enterprises that move the field of education forward. Dr. Lynch is the author of It’s Time for a Change: School Reform for the Next Decade, the newly released A Guide to Effective School Leadership Theories, the forthcoming The Call to Teach: An Introduction to Education (Pearson, January 11, 2014), and Pass or Fail in America's Schools: How Social Promotion and Academic Retention are Destroying Public Education (Praeger, November 2014). In addition, he is the editor of the following projects; Before Obama: A Reappraisal of Black Reconstruction Era Politicians (Praeger, October 31, 2012), the book series Studies in Anti-Intellectualism and Academic Disengagement (Rowman & Littlefield), and a forthcoming book entitled Reimagining School Reform and Innovation (Sense, 2014). Please visit his website at www.drmattlynch.com for more information.

Dr. Matthew Lynch's Links

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SEPTEMBER 28, 2012 4:28PM

Do We Really Still Use Corporal Punishment in Schools?

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It's difficult to believe in this day and age that we still have some schools around the nation that are using corporal punishment as a form of discipline. While it may be seen as a controversial subject to some, the fact remains that you are going to bringing some problems your way, even if it's in the form of the media, when you start paddling kids in school. The new school year has just been in session for weeks, and already this age-old debate is rearing its ugly head around the country, and in the headlines.

In recent news there have been headlines of a Florida school district wanting to bring corporal punishment back into the schools. A newly elected school board member is suggesting that the paddle be allowed as a form of punishment in the schools. Additional headlines suggest that there may be an issue with male administrators dishing out the spanking of teenage girls. This is just a snapshot of the headlines that are taking center stage as school administrator's break in their paddles this school year.

At this point, there are only 19 states that now allow corporal punishment, which is allowing the school to use physical punishment on a child. Such punishment usually includes a spanking of some kind, typically done with a wooden paddle. Although not allowed in the majority of states, it is reported that there are over 200,000 children who are victims of it each year around the country. It's difficult to imagine that so many children are going home throughout the school year with welts, bruises, and broken vessels, as punishment for something they did in school.

Spankings themselves, as well as corporal punishment, are controversial topics at best. There is a lot of evidence and research that has pointed to the fact that spanking as a form of punishment, at any age, can be problematic. We as a society need to be aware of this research, especially when it comes to it still being allowed in the schools of 19 of our states. Here are some of the most troubling aspects of corporal punishment in schools:

Research indicates that children who are disciplined with spanking go on to have more mental illness as adults. Spanking has been linked to children becoming adults who not only have mental health issues, but also experience more depression, and have problems with substance abuse.
Spanking children is also believed to make them become adults who are more aggressive, antisocial, and who go on to abuse their own spouse and children.
• As a nation, we are concerned with our high-school drop-out rates. This makes me wonder how many adults would want to continue showing up at their jobs if they knew they would be paddled if they didn't perform their jobs correctly. Perhaps if students were not being paddled, they may hang in there a while longer and take to their studies a little better.

Corporal punishment may be under attack once again because we are starting a new school year. But until we outlaw it from every state in the country, we will have the problems associated with it each year. And those problems, as we have discussed, are far reaching and long lasting. They impact us as a society long after the child has completed their schooling.

While the Supreme Court allows corporal punishment in whatever states and school districts have it legally on the books, this is a matter of ethics. We as a nation need to do what is right by the next generation. By the looks of it, if corporal punishment continues in the 19 states it is currently allowed in, we could be raising a lot of children who may go on to have mental illnesses, be more aggressive, abuse their spouses, and have addiction problems.

Once they are adults, society can point the finger at them and say that it's their own fault, and they have created the problems in their life by the choices they have made. But if we can agree that the writing is on the wall, and the potential long-term impact is there, then we may need to start pointing a few fingers at the schools, as they are using a form of punishment that experts agree goes on to create more unwanted behavior.

Now is the time for parents around the nation, especially those who live in states where corporal punishment is still allowed, to take a stand. It's time that we focus on more peaceful and less harmful ways to teach the children of the nation right from wrong. Getting rid of the paddles in the schools of this nation is a great place to start!

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Comments

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corporal punishment kept me alert and in line in school. 1st amendment aside, every public school should be assigned a Catholic nun with a paddled adorned with a uniform hole pattern throughout, because while I did get popped with that thing once, the fear of it was much worse than the reality of it, and fear is a powerful motivator.

(though I do see how this can be abused and every parent should sign a waiver for their personal Nun-inator prior to her laying down the law...)