Reasonable corporal punishment should be permitted in American public schools.
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Four Key Points for Judges and potential contenders:
1. Reasonable corporal punishment includes, but is not necessarily limited to, physical conditioning (e.g., running laps around a track), spanking/paddling and the like. (1). The only corporal punishment at issue is "reasonable" corporal punishment. Any abusive corporal punishment would be, by definition, unreasonable. Thus, abusive corporal punishment (e.g., depriving a student of access to water while making him or her run laps in 115 degree Texas heat, beating with a baseball bat, thrashing with an electrical cord) is outside the scope of this debate. Corporal punishment permitted by law in those states permitting it is presumptively reasonable. (1).
2. The legality of corporal punishment is a different issue than reasonableness, however. This is about the normative question of whether corporal punishment should be allowed, not whether it is allowed in any type or form. Arguments with respect to the legal status of corporal punishment shall be considered non-topical and disregarded by judges.
3. The debate is limited to use of corporal punishment in the school setting, and the specific school setting at issue is American public schools. Other contexts beyond the school setting (e.g., corporal punishment at home), in non-American settings (e.g., Australia or Sweden) or in non-public contexts (private and/or religious schools) may be relevant as illustrative examples. But this is a debate about the United States (as opposed countries where corporal punishment is routinely carried out in unreasonable ways according to American sensibilities, like Malaysia, Uganda, Thailand, India or South Korea).
4. The debate is only about whether reasonable corporal punishment should be "permitted," as opposed to mandatory. Permitting corporal punishment does not imply that it will be used wholly or totally in place of other available measures of discipline (like in-school suspension, detention or revocation of extra curricular privileges).
Further, PRO does not have to come up with a plan for HOW corporal punishment should be applied or provide evidence that any particular scheme of implementing would avoid harms (such as potential abuses), identify what if any safeguards as to preventing abuse should be implemented, whether it should be a default punishment as opposed to something like in-school suspension, whether parents should be required to opt-in or opt-out or other issues focusing on implementation. Implementation-focused issues are beyond the scope of this resolution.
Source:
(1) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_corporal_punishment_in_the_United_States
Rules: Please review the rules carefully before accepting.
Structure. The structure of this debate shall follow as such:
Round 1: debaters shall make their affirmative cases (absent any specific refutation of arguments made by the opposing side).
Round 2: debaters shall rebut the affirmative cases raised in round 1 (and may introduce new evidence in support of such rebuttals).
Round 3: debaters shall reply to the rebuttals provided in round 2 and provide any reconstructive arguments in support of arguments initially raised in round 1 (but may not introduce new evidence in support of such replies or reconstructive arguments).
Burdens of Persuasion. The burdens of persuasion shall be equal, as stated below:
In order for PRO to win, PRO must argue that "on balance" reasonable corporal punishment should be permitted in American public schools; and prevent CON from establishing that, by the same standard, corporal punishment should NOT be permitted in American public schools.
In order for CON to win, CON must argue that "on balance" reasonable corporal punishment should NOT be permitted in American public schools; and prevent PRO from establishing that, by the same standard, corporal punishment SHOULD be permitted in American public schools.
For the avoidance of doubt, the burdens of persuasion apply equally to both sides. No side has any greater or lesser burden than the other. All starting points are equal.
Please ask questions if any of the above is unclear. If you do not agree to these terms, it would be better that you select another debate.
Accepting this debate implies that you agree with all terms above.
- Observation: Let's not put the cart before the horse.
- This debate isn't about whether corporal punishment should be implemented in any specific way, used for specific conduct violations or should be mandatory.
- Those would be the next steps, once we decide whether corporal punishment should be allowed.
- 1. The failed status quo.
- A. Student conduct violations; Current approach.
- Most student conduct violations are for garden-variety misbehavior; not drugs, gangs or violent offenses. According to the empirical literature, offenses involving defiance and insubordination comprise the majority of causes for school discipline. (Bloomberg 2004, 2 (reviewing literature)).
- Few options are available to maintain appropriate classroom discipline: referral, in-/out-of-school suspension or expulsion. (Bloomberg 2004; Mizel 2016).
- It seemingly never occurred to "educators" that taking problem kids out of the classroom and segregating them into groups with other misbehaving students might make the problems worse; even though that is amply reflected in the relevant literature.
- Prolonged time periods spent outside of the classroom and away from structured learning environments is particularly harmful to students most in need of structure and positive influence (Kirsch 2019).
- ISS in particular “was associated with lower grade point averages and increased likelihood of high school dropout," (Cholewa 2019).
- Out-of-school suspension results in similar outcomes (Bloomberg 2004).
- B. Current approach fails.
- Short & Long term outcomes.
- Short term:
- Failure to achieve intended purpose: To no one’s surprise, it turns out that referrals and in-/out-of-school suspension fail to deter student misconduct (Bloomberg 2004, 2-8).
- Bad situation, made worse: American Academy of Pediatrics 2003 warns that current measures such as suspension and expulsion “exacerbate academic deterioration, and when students are provided with no immediate educational alternative, student alienation, delinquency, crime and substance abuse may ensue,” (AAPS 2003).
- Long term:
- The "referral" or suspension-based discipline model contributes to the “school-to-prison” pipeline, to the detriment of students/society (Bloomberg 2004; Mizel 2016).
- Student suspensions cause life-long harm to students and their communities. (Batcher-Hicks 2019, 17-21).
- According to Batcher-Hicks 2019, school suspensions result in overall declines in student achievement, lower lifelong educational attainment and adult criminal activity.
- In particular, schools with higher suspension rates are 15 to 20% more likely to be arrested and incarcerated as adults, are less likely to attend/complete college.
- Rosenbaum 2018 shows that “[p]rior to suspension, the suspended and non suspended youth did not differ on 60 pre-suspension variables including students’ self-reported delinquency and risk behaviors, parents’ reports of socioeconomic status, and administrators reports of school disciplinary policies."
- Yet, [t]welve years after suspension (ages 25-32), suspended youth were less likely than matched non-suspended youth to have earned bachelor’s degrees or high school diplomas and were more likely to have been arrested and on probation, suggesting that suspension...explains negative outcomes.” (Rosenbaum 2018).
- Status quo undermines the education system's goals.
- Minorities hurt the most.
- Minority students are the most likely to be the most hurt by the current suspension-based discipline model (Mizel 2016).
- According to Mizel 2016, latinos were most likely to receive office referral, and blacks most likely to be suspended or expelled. Likewise, boys were more much more likely than girls to receive office referral and to be suspended or expelled.
- Illustrative example: In Charlotte-Mecklenburg, 23% of middle school students are suspended each school year and suspensions are concentrated heavily among minority populations.
- Boys in particular are left behind.
- In school: According to national trend data, boys account for about about 70% of all school suspensions, receive lower grades, fail grades more often, present with more hyperactive-related disciplinary issues and are far more likely to be segregated into "special educational" programs (Jackson 2013).
- Out of school: boys commit suicide 2-3 times more frequently than girls, account for about 80% of all high school drop-outs, fail to attend college at substantially higher rates than girls (college populations are only about 44% male) and are about a 1-1.5 yrs behind girls in achievement in reading and writing (Jackson 2013).
- Current approaches to remediate these problems (promoting engagement, peer interaction, etc.) haven't helped (see Whitmire 2011; Jackson 2013 (discussing harms, recommendations)).
- It wasn't always this bad.
- While I wouldn't go so far as to suggest that not paddling students is what got us here, cross-cultural empirical data do not find these achievement gap issues before the second half of the 20th century (see, e.g., Hermann 2019), which is when public efforts against corporal punishment really started to set in.
- 2. Corporal punishment: the reasonable alternative.
- A. Old model wasn't broken; shouldn't have been "fixed."
- Junk science animated the move against corporal punishment.
- The empirical literature clearly demonstrates no lasting harm resulting from spanking (see, e.g., Baumrind (Berkeley); Baumrind 2001; Scientific American).
- The public move against corporal punishment largely came about as a result of junk science (e.g., Gershoff 2013; Sheehan 2008) devoid of evidence for alleged harms and lacking viable alternatives (Gunnoe 2019).
- Baumrind 2002 warns that the majority of negative child-behavior outcomes alleged in the anti-spanking literature are based on “methodological weaknesses,” which I will address I am sure at greater length in the rounds to come. (Baumrind 2002; see also Larzelere 2010, Baumrind 2001).
- What the evidence actually says.
- The data on corporal punishment obviates any basis for opposition to it; corporal punishment is very much in kids’ best interest. (Fuller 2015).
- In contrast to methodologically flawed research(e.g., Gershoff's life work) and politicized pop-psychology opposing spanking, less spanking is directly linked to more child abuse and more teen violence; while children who are spanked tend to have the highest levels of optimism, academic achievement and highest self-esteem. (Fuller 2015, 264-315; see also Larzelere & Baumrind 2010).
- Kids who are spanked performed better in school, were more involved and optimistic in terms of their future, compared with those never spanked (CNN 2010).
- B. Corporal punishment: a tried and true method that works.
- Nexus between discipline & the boys' achievement gap.
- According to the empirical literature, a "more disciplined school climate" is likely to improve boys' educational outcomes in the short and long term (Hermann 2019).
- School administrators agree that paddling is effective.
- For example, Kenneth Whalum Jr., a board commissioner for Memphis City Schools in Tennessee, told CNN that, in his experience, “[o]ur public education is in a state of crisis because the current discipline system in this nation is being ineffectively implemented,” and “[c]orporal punishment would be an arrow in the quiver for teachers to use at their disposal. It’s the best way to get the system right,” (CNN 2010).
- To wit, school districts are bringing corporal punishment back. For example, in March 2020 the Pampa ISD in Texas voted to bring back corporal punishment for the 2021 school year, following others throughout Texas with minimal opposition from parents or students (Miller 2020; see also NY Times 2018).
- Student preferences & experiences.
- Smithfield High School Principal Chad O’Brian told a local news outlet that “A lot of the children actually would rather take corporal punishment. When they get into detention or [in/out-of-school suspension] then they are going to start missing extra curricular activities, ball games can’t participate, can’t come to games and those kinds of things. They would rather just...get it over with,” (WBCI 2019).
- Student accounts confirm that corporal punishment, specifically paddling, motivated them to stay out of trouble. For example, Three Rivers ISD student Joseph Garcia said that being paddled wasn’t necessarily a bad thing. “It was kinda embarrassing. I Shouldn't have done thing I did. I'm now doing better changes and doing my best to stay out of trouble,” Garcia told a local news outlet (Garcia 2017).
- Additionally, Ozen High School student Raleigh Johnson Reported that after being paddled for failing a class, the coach “got it through [Johnson’s] head” that grades were important, he told a local newspaper (Henry 2012).
- Likewise, Julian Mansfield, a 19-year-old student agrees with his former high school’s use of corporal punishment. He told CNN that the potential shame caused by corporal punishment is more a deterrent than the threat of pain, unlike suspension or detention which does not involve the same level of embarrassment (CNN 2010).
- AAPS 2003
- Batcher-Hicks 2019
- Baumrind 2001
- Baumrind 2002
- Baumrind (Berkeley)
- Bloomberg 2004
- Cholewa 2019
- CNN 2010
- Fuller 2015
- Garcia 2017
- Gershoff 2013
- Gunnoe 2019
- Henry 2012
- Hermann 2019
- Jackson 2013
- Kirsch 2019
- Larzelere 2010
- Larzelere & Baumrind 2010
- Miller 2020
- Mizel 2016
- NY Times 2018
- Rosenbaum 2018
- Scientific American
- Sheehan 2008
- WBCI 2019
- Whitmire 2011
- A judicial committee would meet daily to investigate written complaints about possible rule violations. The judicial committee would consist of both staff and students (some elected, others appointed from various age groups) who serve for a month at a time. Anyone can make a complaint. After complaints are investigated, the committee may charge someone with having broken a rule. Rulebreakers would then face some form of restorative justice (e.g. accepting responsibility & actively repairing the harm). Circles of support could include the families of both rulebreakers and victims. No punishment allowed.
- 1. Punishment's justification.
- Observations:
- 1. As a threshold issue, the resolution presumes that punishment can be justified. To win this debate, I do not have to prove that punishment can be justified. Though, I certainly can. And do so below.
- 2. It is unclear whether PRO objects to the practice or definition of punishment, as such; or both.
- 3. Punishment is the external imposition of consequences in response to past actions; which would include, for example, "restorative justice" which CON indicates would include "accepting responsibility & actively repairing the harm." After all, any externally imposed change in position could be a "punishment," as what constitutes "punishment" as such is subjective; it's in the eye of the beholder. See generally Br'er Rabbit, and related African folklore.
- To the extent CON alleges restorative justice is different from punishment, yet still defines it as an externally imposed change in position, he's talking about differences without distinctions. This argument therefore fails.
- To illustrate, Foucault states in Discipline & Punish, the act of punishment is ubiquitous in society. And while the particulars of its imposition have changed over time, societies have generally structured institutions "punish less, perhaps; but certainly...punish better."
- In the past, by the spectacle of the scaffold; in the present, hierarchical observation, normalizing judgment, and the examination.
- Yet, the effect is the same, and common to this set is a change in position resulting in submission to authority of some form.
- Justifying Punishment.
- There are two levels in play here; justifying punishment as such, and justifying punishment in its particular application (whether by reference to rules, standards and/or principles).
- Essentially two approaches to justifying punishment: retrospective and prospective. (Bedau 2015)
- Retrospective approaches are backward-looking.
- There, the idea is to externally impose costs in retribution for past bad acts.
- From this perspective, punishment is either as a good in itself or as a practice required by justice (e.g., the Platonic conception, "giving every man his due"), thus making a direct claim on our allegiance.
- Prospective approaches are forward-looking.
- These tend to be focused on consequences of future actions, and relate to some sort of utilitarian type thought. From this perspective, punishment is a means to prevent future harm (e.g., any form of corrective action, or subsequent change in position responsive to a past act meant to prevent that act from happening in the future).
- By implication, so called "restorative justice," while admittedly different in form than, say, the imposition of physical/somatic pain, is oriented towards the same end, for the same reasons and involving exercises of power in the same way.
- As Foucault, based his lectures and writings in Disipline & Punish would agree, inconsistencies at the level of particularity do not obviate consistency and congruity at the higher level. In all cases, power is imposed to shape human behavior.
- A combination of those two approaches is also certainly an option.
- Particular methods, as such, typically involve some combination of both and are not generally constrained to either the retro- or prospective category; in practice, these differences manifest typically at the level of intent and the "reason why," as opposed to the "method of how."
- For example, a parent grounding a child for breaking curfew is at once intended as a means of retribution ("you broke the rules, and therefore now face this loss of privilege") and future deterrence ("you will think about breaking curfew next time, because you know I'll ground you if you do").
- Behold. Punishment's two justifications, laid bare in this abbreviated form.
- 2. Necessity.
- Observations:
- 1. The burden is not on PRO to prove punishment's:
- necessity, generally (see CON R1, 2);
- utility for any particular purpose (see CON R1, 2.a.-b.), such as to:
- make children learn (R1, 2.a.), or
- discipline students (R1, 2.b.).
- 2. My burden is to show that reasonable corporal punishment should be permitted in American public schools. Nevertheless, I address these arguments below.
- A. Necessity to make children learn.
- The goal of punishment is not to make children learn, and few would suggest otherwise. Rather, the objective is to prevent others' misbehavior and/or untoward conduct from interfering with others' learning.
- The idea being that in an undisciplined environment, learning in the context of a school cannot effectively take place.
- That is not to imply that unstructured environments can never be conducive to learning, so much as that in the specific context of an American public school (i.e., the location type at issue here), the process of instructing students cannot effectively take place.
- For example, if students knew they could engage in misbehavior without the risk of externally imposed consequences, at least enough would that would prevent others from receiving adequate instruction.
- So, punishment may not be necessary to make children learn; but it is necessary to prevent learning's disruption by other children.
- B. Necessity to discipline students.
- I incorporate by reference the argument above relating to the necessity of imposing a disciplined environment to prevent some students' misbehavior from interfering with all student's learning in a classroom.
- CON's proposed alternative to punishment is, as I stated above, a difference without a distinction; he even concedes that his is a " disciplinary system."
- Calling an externally imposed change in position, oriented for the purpose of preventing future misconduct of any kind is punishment by definition.
- The change is at least, according to CON, "accepting responsibility," and "actively repairing harm."
- CON even broadens the scope of those subject to his punitive process, from the offending kid to "families of both rulebreakers and victims."
- Implicit behind such broadening is the notion that society in general is harmed by the misconduct of others, as opposed to only an identifiable victim of the offending action itself.
- It is on this same basis that the state grounds its right to imprison, execute and otherwise deprive lawbreakers of their rights/liberties.
- That both "victim" and aggressor may have a "voice" does not mean that CON's restorative justice scheme is any less punitive. If anything, it broadens the scope of those whose actions are inconvenienced or burdened by the rule-breaker's actions.
- Even still, CON provides no evidence that "restorative justice" would adequately address the disciplinary challenges schools face, particularly those most directly disruptive to student learning in an American public school setting.
- As above, defiance and insubordination comprise the majority of causes for school discipline. (Bloomberg 2004, 2 (reviewing literature)).
- It remains unclear how, if at all, CON's punitive scheme of restorative justice could address these even better than the status quo (i.e., ISS/OSS), or even mitigate them in any sense.
- As I said above, according to the empirical literature, a "more disciplined school climate" is likely to improve students' educational outcomes in the short and long term (Hermann 2019). And spanking/paddling are effective means of accomplishing (CNN 2010) as well as at least some students' preferred method of correction (e.g., Garcia 2017) and effective at preventing future misconduct (e.g., id., Henry 2012, CNN 2010, WBCI 2019).
- 3. Needs of Society.
- If as CON claims, John Dewy is correct, and public schools are "an outgrowth of the needs of the society in which they exist," then conditioning students to perform effectively across any of society's normalizing power structures is paramount.
- Returning to Foucault, particularly Discipline & Punish, locations and instrumentalities of modern employment (offices, factories, hospitals, and the like) share in common with schools that they follow the panopticon-type normalizing power-structure of modern prisons. To the extent students can perform effectively in a school setting, so too may they likewise perform effectively in other settings.
- After all, they work the same; student answers to teacher; employee to supervisor; etc. At the core of each, the relationships between individuals as subjects of power and institution exercising power upon them is the same.
- And as we shift to an increasingly post-industrial context, the need for individual submission to institutions of power (e.g., employee monitoring applications on computers) will only increase.
- And clearly, based on the relevant and available data I cited above, the current approaches fail to do prepare students for transition to such a context. The post-educational outcomes speak for themselves.
- Bedau 2015
- Br'er Rabbit
- Foucault, Discipline and Punish (1977)
- "A few studies have examined whether parenting interventions that target a reduction in physical punishment predict change in child outcomes. A randomized controlled trial (RCT) evaluation of the Incredible Years intervention for young children with behavior problems found that treatment effects were significantly mediated through a reduction in parents’ use of spanking (Beauchaine, Webster-Stratton, & Reid, 2005). An analysis of data from a national RCT of the federal Head Start program showed that parents of children randomly assigned to participate in the Head Start program decreased their use of spanking more than parents in the control group, and that this reduction in spanking, in turn, predicted declines in children’s aggression (Gershoff, Ansari, Purtell, & Sexton, 2016). An RCT of the Chicago Parent Program, part of which focused on African American and Latino/a parents and their preschool children, found that the intervention group reduced parents’ use of physical punishment significantly more than the control group and that their children had fewer behavior problems over time (Breitenstein et al., 2012). These experimental program evaluations provide evidence that interventions can reduce child problem behavior by reducing parents’ use of spanking, and in doing so provide evidence for a causal link between spanking and children’s problem behavior." (Gershoff 2018).
- My argument was simple:
- 1. The status quo has failed, so a change is needed.
- 2. Corporal punishment is a reasonable alternative.
- These are the voting issues:
- 1. I established that the status quo failed, and CON agrees.
- He agrees that the status quo is particularly harmful to minorities, and he's right. It does.
- I established causation; while CON did not.
- The status quo's harm is caused by a lack of effective discipline (e.g., Hermann 2019).
- Despite arguing that punishment causes the status quo's harms, CON's argument contains no evidence supporting causation between status quo harms and the imposition of punishment/discipline.
- CON fails to demonstrate a causal link between "punishing our children," and "harms of the status quo."
- Likewise, CON provided no evidence illustrating that without punishment, the status quo's harms would be solved.
- I established the opposite. In the absence of discipline, student outcomes are worse across the board and in fact, CON seemed to agree (e.g., Hermann 2019).
- And CON's evidence supports my points to this effect (see below). It's not enough to re-brand "punishment" as "restorative" and pretend like it isn't discipline. It's the same thing, imposed for the same reason. Only difference is how. Not why.
- CON's alternative ("restorative justice") is internally contradictory.
- Even if CON had a causal link between punishment as such and the status quo's harms (which he did not), CON's alternative world of "no punishment" is, in fact, just punishment by another means.
- Because what counts for punishment is subjective (see, e.g., Br'er Rabbit, and related African proverbs) that which is punishing need only constitute a change in position, which CON's restorative justice scheme certainly would. Thus, requiring participation in a post-incident process merely styled as "restorative justice" is no less punishing than, say, a suspension or detention.
- The particularities of the changed position may differ, as may be the intent behind the proposal ("restoring" versus something else); but the form and effect is the same: discipline.
- By arguing simply for changing the form of discipline to "restorative practices," CON concedes that at least some form of discipline is necessary.
- All of CON's evidence support the imposition of at least some form of discipline, and causally connect that discipline to improved student outcomes, through various approaches (see, e.g., the "large body of research," to which CON cites in R2, including Fronius 2019, Augustine 2019, et al., all of which supports this point exactly).
- And indeed, discipline absolutely is necessary. After all, the point of any form of discipline (whether we call it "punishment" or whether we call it "restorative justice") is to prevent student misbehaviour from interfering with other students' learning.
- I agree with CON that kids are naturally curious; but that's not the issue here. You don't punish to make kids memorize stuff. After all, we're not talking about punishing all students simply to motivate them to be academically successful. You only punish in the context of a school to prevent student interference in their own learning or the learning of others.
- Rather, what we're talking about is much narrower: how do you deal with those students whose misconduct interferes with the educational process?
- Which brings us to corporal punishment.
- 2. Corporal punishment is a reasonable alternative.
- Note that I am not arguing for -- and do not have to establish -- that spanking should take the place of all other forms of student discipline; just that it should be an option on the table (per the BOP).
- Corporal punishment works; CON has no evidence otherwise.
- In R1, I provided clear and undisputed evidence that corporal punishment works; I posted academic literature (e.g., Baumrind), reviews of academic literature (e.g., Fuller 2015) and the testimonial experiences of both students and school administrators (e.g., CNN, and several others).
- CON did not refute. Rather, he chose to characterize certain sources (e.g., Fuller 2015) with adjectives and ad hom fallacy-based reasoning. But the irony should be lost on on none.
- "Harms children": Fuller 2015 lists scores of sources that state exactly the opposite; which was the point of my citing to that article.
- It's not like Fuller 2015 was making extraordinary claims, either. He simply reviewed the ample body of literature questioning the methodologies and findings of anti-corporal punishment "advocates," like Gershoff; while charting the obvious data-sets that she totally ignored in whatever analysis she purports to have conducted.
- "Rigorous" and "correlation study" should never be used in the same sentence, either. Indeed, Baumrind (Gershoff's peer) called Gershoff's methods "incompatible" with scientific standards, and noted that Gershoff "emulate[d] political spin doctors by selectively reporting findings or refusing to abandon pre-judgment when faced with" data obviating her preconceived notions (Fuller at 280, citing Baumrind; see also Larzelere, who reaches the same conclusion for the same reasons).
- Nearly every single weak correlation study linking spanking to to some "harm" traces its roots to Gershoff, in one form or another (e.g., Gershoff & Grogan-Kaylor, which CON links in R2).
- But Gershoff's many "meta-analysies," and the entirety of her life's work fail to support that claim. Gershoff is a quack; her "studies" are junk science, and I warned CON about this in R1.
- Indeed, her own peers (e.g., Baumrind sources) criticize her findings' reliability.
- While Gershoff purports to be making claims about ONLY spanking, the data-sets from which she draws co-mingle spanking with beating with a stick, closed-fist punching, open-hand face slapping, beating with an electrical cord, as well as hitting, punching and kicking that would leave identifiable bruises on a child's body (e.g., Fuller 2015, citing Baumrind) at 282-83, n.198 and throughout the article).
- The so-called "evidence" that spanking harms children is out.
- The specious associations Gershoff draws are no such thing; rather the result of a methodologically inept zealot who manipulated the data in front of her to find what she wanted to find; while ignoring everything else out there, as would have vitiated her "links" between spanking as such and any harm she associates it with.
- In fact, "in contrast to the inadequate...methods" of Gershoff, Baumrind et al. plainly and clearly demonstrate that when you focus only on spanking (i.e., reasonable corporal punishment, which is what this debate is about) causes no such lasting harms (see Fuller 2015 at 306-315 and all footnotes, including in particular those citing to Baumrind).
- It likewise turns out that when you ban spanking, child abuse rates actually increase; as was the case in Sweden. After Sweden banned spanking, child abuse rates increased almost 500% (Fuller 2015 at 269-70, n.132). Relatedly, Sweden's spanking ban (noted above) also ushered that country's single most significant increase in teenage criminality and violence in the 20th century (Fuller 2015 at 271-73).
- Reasonable corporal punishment clearly improves outcomes, based on empirical literature and student/administrator experiences alike.
- As Baumrind's analysis plainly indicates, children with the highest optimism, academic achievement and self-esteem were spanked (see, e.g., Fuller 2015 at 311; and related Baumrind sources, as well as others from R1). By spanking early, further punishment became less necessary later on and therefore indicating that future misbehaviour was averted.
- And the testimonial evidence supports. As I established in R1, corporal punishment is a tried and true method that works. The empirical literature clearly links a more disciplined school climate with improved educational outcomes, especially in boys who tend to misbehave the most (Hermann 2019).
- Both students themselves and school administrators agree corporal punishment is effective, too. I cited unrefuted evidence for each (e.g., CNN 2010, Miller 2020, WBCI 2019, Garcia 2017 and Henry 2012). CON characterized them as a "minority," yet I never held them out as being representative. What I said was that the trend against corporal punishment was reversing, as various schools increasingly are bringing corporal punishment back (e.g., Pampa ISD, in Texas).
- 3. CON's arguments to the contrary fail:
- In order to win, CON needed to argue that reasonable corporal punishment should not be permitted in American public schools. This he has failed to do. CON did not establish that reasonable corporal punishment should not be permitted in American public schools.
- CON endeavored to argue: 1. That punishment can't be justified; period. Yet, I proved that it can be, from at least several perspectives (see R2), including his own; and 2. Even if you could justify punishment, it has no place in American public schools. Yet, I proved that it absolutely does, based on the empirical literature and testimonial accounts of students and school administrators alike.
- So, whether you're trusting the data (e.g., Baumrind) or the lived experiences of students and administrators (e.g., sources above); you're supporting that corporal punishment should be allowed as a form of punishment in American public schools.
Definitely a good topic, without a clear right answer.
My gut reaction is that pro didn’t clearly affirm the resolution against the doubt cast by con… The description however is crystal clear on their competing burdens and effective resolutions. To which if I said pro only got 7 out of 10, that is still “on balance” more than the 6 out of 10 con got (these are not precise numbers, they’re just to showcase the general point).
Con ultimately gave too much ground in the wrong places, which left me not convinced his alternate proposal was mutually exclusive to the possibility of spanking (or something else physical but minor) when other methods fail; which was important to meeting his burden that such should not be permitted.
There’s a few points that really stood out to me:
I don’t want to say this is the crux of the debate, but it’s been nagging me... If Gershoff should be trusted or not. When a single researcher’s name gets drug through the mud preemptively, avoid their research when making a case to support the same conclusions as their research. This is important since the impact of anything from them is mitigated by the doubt, whereas any other researcher for the same topic does not suffer that.
Is change needed? Yes. Both sides agree. Ultimately students would be better off with more discipline. I really did not feel much doubt to the benefits pro offered, the challenge seemed to center on character assassinations of teachers and the possibility that there might be an even better way to attain the desired outcome.
Punishment gets into a couple dicey areas. It seems con considers things to only be punishment if the main point is the harm inflicted, which leaves a world of room for things if anything else is the main point and physical discomfort is collateral damage. I found the God assertions on it non-sequitur (waiting for God to handle it, doesn’t solve anything, it’s just wishful thinking and inaction… which might be how we got here). Pro was able to easily show that punishment is justifiable by multiple standards and backed by sources. If con’s proposal of a judicial committee is punishment or not was in dispute, but it sounds like public shame for the troublemakers, to deter the problematic actions; which sounds like a form of punishment with similar mental impacts to the shame of detention, loss of privileges, or even spanking. Con trying to argue schools are worse now because we punish more than when spankings were a thing, made it sound like spankings (even if suboptimal) is a step in the right direction.
Con did really well on rhetoric appeals. They are just not so moving to me, when they feel like flavorful but over the top assertions; instead of warranted arguments. Still, style points here.
more at:
https://www.debateart.com/debates/2979/comment-links/38099
https://docs.google.com/document/d/17sRFmaSnWAgXD2ERPVvOMt36FH1FHvemwLSR-mMmkbI/edit
Lemme know if the link doesn’t work and I’ll add it to comments too.
See comments. Con won by a landslide, even if his round 1 wasn't very impressive.
most advanced debates are about the key premises and why they outweigh. I don't see the problem with that. I just like analyzing all the arguments because it helps when they don't say outright what the most important part of argument is
I suspect (though I'm not sure) that there is a problem with how the voting rules are here. When giving an RFD in formal debate, you typically don't have to address all of the args or even the args in general. You have to say what the deciding factor was in the round and why that outweighs everything else/is the deciding factor. At least that is how it is from my experience.
RFD
Coal opens up with arguments about current violation, failures of suspension based discipline, hurt of minority, and proof of corporal punishment successfully making children more "involved and optimistic". He adds upon authorities who agree that CP works, and that children would take it over missing out on school. This is the basis of his premise, and relatively solid.
FT counters with the idea that punishment should never be done, as it isn't necessary for learning or discipline. He also asserts that it conflicts with our needs. Here he creates a counter idea where you shouldn't need to correct children at all. I don't see how children can rehabilitate on themselves, but let's see if Pro notices this issue.
Pro notices that FT's idea of restorative justice may be problematic because punishment has still be universal in society. He also thinks about looking forward, backwards, to point out noticing the reason behind the punishment. The requirement by justice, or the prevent of future harm, are interesting ideas that somewhat echo with his first round. He continues by saying that CP is used to correct misbehavior, preventing disruption, and also that Con's system being quite vague to mitigate the problem -- something I noticed myself. Finally, he claims that the schools represent work, and that the submission to power is key. (However, this brings another can of worms in that Employees cannot be CP'd by Employers, potentially killing this comparison.)
Con continues with clarification by noting that the violence in particular makes the issue an issue, and that Restorative Justice is far more effective, using two strong studies. This is excellent and does big work to help support his impacts. Next, he uses common sense to show that psychological problems can form, and that the societal norm of harming children could be perpetuated -- bringing in the slippery slope of using CP on adults, something I noted myself. He counters that CP can result in worse behavior, and even says Pro has methodological weaknesses. The RCT's put the nail in the coffin to provide evidence supporting reduced spanking. Con also pierces through Fuller and L&B, noting that only parenting styles were analyzed rather than CP. Finally, he concludes with the same Gershoff Meta analysis to prove that compliance does not work. With this round in mind, he completely overturns all of Pro's arguments.
Pro continues asserting his same evidence, but he doesn't tell us how Hermann outweighs Gershoff's meta-analysis. He says Con's RJ system is contradiction, as it's a different type of punishment, but doesn't notice Con's crux that violence inflicted is the problem, not punishment. He says Con thinks some discipline is necessary, but doesn't tell us why the RJ has the same or bigger problems compared to CP. Then, he continues by arguing that Fuller 2015 was questioning the methodologies, going into detail about how Baumrind noticed he was overly broad in his analysis. This is excellent to reduce this study's impact. He also notices how Sweden's stats counter Con's slipper slope of violence. He concludes that CNN and other sources prove that CP have a significant effect.
Con crystallizes that the RJ is completely different from the infliction of harm, and that his case is uniquely strong especially in the promotion of responsibility while respecting rights, without mindless obedience. Con also notices that Pro drops most of the inherent harms, and that Gershoff's non-correlational ideas are still pretty strong, especially with 2016 and 2018 studies fixing the co-mingling of meta analysis. He furthers with the fact that the three sources only talk about parent-child relationship, rather than in-school CP. This greatly damages Pro's ideas. Finally, he concludes that RJ would promote a more democratic and free solution compared to CP.
With the anti-CP sources fixed by the end of the debate, and not much impact killed from Con's arguments about RJ, Pro fails to overturn the ideas that CP is inherently violent, damaging, and unjustifiable. Pro could have done better if he proved that the American school system was not all that different from parent-child relationship, and potentially bridge the gap between his studies and his results. However, Pro is losing by a landslide because he went into great detail about sources without noticing the bigger picture and the painted imagery of CP that Con produces. As such, vote to Con.
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>Reported Vote: spacetime // Mod action: Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: Con.
>Reason for Decision: See Comments Tab.
>Reason for Mod Action:
As previously stated... "This vote is almost really good, explaining why con took the lead... However, it falls short on analysis of what pro offered."
https://www.debateart.com/debates/2979/comment-links/37461
Just adding that pro argued the pro side to the resolution, does not indicate at attempt at understanding any contentions they used (or tried to use) in support of their Burden of Proof.
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spacetime
Added: 1 day ago
Reason:
== Original RFD ==
PRO’s big mistake in this debate was neglecting to properly address CON’s “restorative justice” alternative.
His only attempt at addressing it was when he framed it as logically inconsistent with CON’s “punishment can’t be justified” argument. At best, all this does is invalidate CON’s “punishment can’t be justified” argument – it does nothing to mitigate restorative justice as a superior alternative to corporal punishment.
PRO made no attempt at contesting any of CON’s empirical evidence regarding the efficacy of restorative justice, so I’m left to conclude that restorative justice is indeed effective.
CON successfully contested PRO’s empirical evidence regarding the efficacy of corporal punishment. He argued that all of PRO’s studies are “talking about corporal punishment exclusively in the context of a loving parent-child relationship” and therefore aren’t applicable to corporal punishment in public schools. PRO completely ignored this rebuttal, so I’m left to conclude that corporal punishment isn’t actually effective.
CON also presented empirical evidence that corporal punishment is harmful to children. However, because CON waited until his rebuttal round to do so, the exchange got cut short – PRO never got a chance to respond to CON’s defense of Gershoff’s research. For that reason, I’m going to exclude this clash from my evaluation of the debate.
Regardless, by the end of the debate, I have more than enough reason to reject corporal punishment in favor of restorative justice. CON wins.
== Addendum ==
PRO argued that corporal punishment works, but the argument was defeated by CON's rebuttal that the studies he cited only apply within "the context of a loving parent-child relationship."
If I'm "retarded" and "incapable of basic reading comprehension," please quote your vote for the main couple contentions offered by pro.
Additionally, you can always re-cast it with additional information. Not like anyone's stopping you.
Coal has that bossman pull even now.
That is objectively false. If you are incapable of basic reading comprehension, then you should not be a vote moderator.
You don't need to review every single clause, or even every argument. The problem is there is no sense of any of the arguments offered by one side outside of liking the other side's case more, which is unfair to their efforts.
I agree with spacetime, I will try to vote if I have time, but his vote seemed perfectly legitimate
Lmao. That's retarded. I don't need to review every single argument made in the debate. This debate hinged on a single clash (corporal punishment vs. restorative justice), and I explained why CON won that clash.
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>Reported Vote: spacetime // Mod action: Removed
>Voting Policy: info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy
>Points Awarded: Con.
>Reason for Decision: See Comments Tab.
>Reason for Mod Action:
This vote is almost really good, explaining why con took the lead... However, it falls short on analysis of what pro offered.
To cast a sufficient vote, for each category awarded, a voter must explicitly perform the following tasks:
(1) Provide specific references to each side’s utilization within the said category.
(2) Weigh the impacts against each other, including if any precluded others.
(3) Explain the decision within the greater context of the debate.
https://info.debateart.com/terms-of-service/voting-policy#casting-votes
Arguments must always be reviewed even if left a tie (in which case less detail is required, but some reason for said tie based on the debate content must still be comprehensible within the vote).
Arguments go to the side that, within the context of the debate rounds, successfully affirms (vote pro) or negates (vote con) the resolution. Ties are possible, particularly with pre-agreed competing claims, but in most cases failing to affirm the resolution means pro loses by default.
Weighing entails analyzing the relative strength of one argument or set of arguments and their impacts against another argument or set of arguments. Weighing requires analyzing and situating arguments and counterarguments within the context of the debate as a whole.
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spacetime
Added: 2 days ago
#1
Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Winner
1 point(s)
Reason:
PRO’s big mistake in this debate was neglecting to properly address CON’s “restorative justice” alternative.
His only attempt at addressing it was when he framed it as logically inconsistent with CON’s “punishment can’t be justified” argument. At best, all this does is invalidate CON’s “punishment can’t be justified” argument – it does nothing to mitigate restorative justice as a superior alternative to corporal punishment.
PRO made no attempt at contesting any of CON’s empirical evidence regarding the efficacy of restorative justice, so I’m left to conclude that restorative justice is indeed effective.
CON successfully contested PRO’s empirical evidence regarding the efficacy of corporal punishment. He argued that all of PRO’s studies are “talking about corporal punishment exclusively in the context of a loving parent-child relationship” and therefore aren’t applicable to corporal punishment in public schools. PRO completely ignored this rebuttal, so I’m left to conclude that corporal punishment isn’t actually effective.
CON also presented empirical evidence that corporal punishment is harmful to children. However, because CON waited until his rebuttal round to do so, the exchange got cut short – PRO never got a chance to respond to CON’s defense of Gershoff’s research. For that reason, I’m going to exclude this clash from my evaluation of the debate.
Regardless, by the end of the debate, I have more than enough reason to reject corporal punishment in favor of restorative justice. CON wins.
based*
"As we shift to an increasingly post-industrial context, the need for individual submission to institutions of power will only increase."
Damn, that is bleak.
wish i could vote on this, but have school
I'm sure I will in due course. Are you following this debate?
You should debate blamonkey, misterchris or whiteflame some time. I believe they’ll put up the challenge you wanted...(though maybe not this topic)
I mean technically yes, round 2 should be limited to rebutting the affirmative cases of round 1.
But if you want to address rebuttals, I'm not going to complain. So your call. I don't care one way or the other.
Relatedly, I haven't written this much about Foucault since I was in grad school . . . . lol
To be clear, Round 2 is for rebuttals to Round 1? I'm not supposed to respond to your rebuttals yet?
Based on what I’ve seen, it’s probably only as handicapping as debating thett3 or Roy.
When you lose this debate, know that your only mistake was accepting it with the conditions laid out in the description.