After reading the article on "How to Train Other Countries" by other countries, I think that the scholarly atmosphere of the school is not only a product of believers' beliefs and actions but also the author's view that it is influenced by the law I fully agree. And the social background of the country. Although customs and rules differ in each country, discipline helps prevent disciplinary problems and create a better learning environment. First of all, this paper examines the evaluation and survey data from 49 countries (Canada, Chile, Israel, Italy, J etc) participating in the 2003 International Mathematics and Scientific Survey Trend Survey (TIMSS).
A series of investigations of child's disciplinary attitudes in New Zealand and other English-speaking countries believes that assault is a legitimate and usual form of parental discipline and believes not to constitute abuse or abuse is showing. This is especially true for adults who experienced a series of corporal punishment for children (Debski et al., 2007). In New Zealand, a survey of 80 children from 5 to 14 years old found that corporal punishment is a type of punishment commonly used by the parents of these children. In some cases, it often happens and is serious enough to qualify for abuse. Corporal punishment has a strong psychological influence on children, it is rejected and makes you feel unpopular (Dobbs, 2007)
In the past, corporal punishment (spanking, rowing, whipping, banding, damaging the body with bandages) is one of the most common disciplines in most schools in the world. Most Western countries and several other countries currently prohibit it, but the United States remained legal after the US Supreme Court ruled in 1977 that paddling would not violate the US Constitution. Corporal punishment is prohibited in 30 countries in the United States, but is prohibited in other countries (mainly South). Several public schools in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas are still being used for important purposes Degrees These states and others Most state private schools can also use it. Corporal punishment at schools in the United States is managed by student's pants or skirt sheets and has a special wooden paddle.
Throughout the history of education, the most common way to maintain school discipline is corporal punishment. When a child attends school, the teacher should become an alternative parent and receive discipline and reward of various forms of guardian. This usually means that students are usually punished by birch, cane, paddle, tape or size if they do something bad. School corporal punishment is still in use in about 69 countries. School corporal punishment has disappeared from most Western countries, including all European countries. In the United States, corporal punishment is not used in public schools in 34 states, corporal punishment is prohibited in 19 states, but only 16 people are actually receiving corporal punishment in the school district.