Caning – The Reality

Caning

Fortunately we live in an era where violence against children is frowned upon. Even smacking is deemed an assault.

Good job too!

In my view (based on personal experience) violence creates violence. It seems to work. It gives that instant gratification that the wrongdoer has suffered and that’s a lesson for all who do wrong, but that disguises the long-term resentment and fury that inevitably comes out further down the line. Violence creates a cycle of anger, revenge, hate and displacement violence. Violence creates more violence. The caned bully would appear contrite then, round the next corner, punch the first kid he encountered.

I was brought up in an age when violence against children was actively encouraged. You could beat your kid senseless. Every school teacher was encouraged to beat discipline into naughty children. Most houses had a cane handy for the correction of children. A smack on the legs or round the ear was mandatory. Children needed discipline.

It all obviously worked didn’t it?

What I recall of my school days is a litany of bullying, daily fights and boiling resentment. My lessons were battlefields.

There is a political dimension to this child abuse. The right-wing hang’em and flog ‘em brigade see violence as a deterrent as well as a suitable punishment – ‘they won’t do that again, will they?’. Despite all the evidence that little Johnny seems to do it all the more. Little Johnny doesn’t think he’s going to get caught again (because he’s crafty) and besides, there’s a lot of status to be gained from being caned. Deterrence doesn’t work.

If it did work then why are the same crew coming back for more week after week? Why were the schools full of such bullying and violence? Why did so many kids hate school?

You see this deterrence theory at work on the world stage. It’s probably why there are so many wars!

The ‘hard’ cane-wielding bullies of teachers ran their classrooms with rods of iron, destroying their subject in the process, turning young minds off and creating pent-up frustration. Further down the line that repression came out as bullying, fighting and disorder in other classrooms. The ‘tough’ teachers regarded the ‘weaker’ staff who did not terrify their kids with gratuitous threats and violence as the problem. If only all staff beat ‘discipline’ into their kids the school would be perfect. Except it wouldn’t, would it? It would resemble a concentration camp in which all enjoyment, fun, pleasure, relationship and joy of learning was drained out like water in a sieve. Education would become a chore to endure.

Not my idea of what a school should be. I prefer schools to be places of safety, warmth and vitality where students work with teachers with mutual enjoyment. That’s what a lot of my teaching life was like.

I watch the news where hateful draconian thugs are meting out ‘justice’ to unfortunate victims – usually women who have committed the terrible crime of not wearing a head scarf correctly. For this they must be publically humiliated and taught a lesson – a lesson that others need to take note of. They are taken to a busy square manhandled and beaten with cane. They might receive ten lashes or two hundred or a thousand.

When you watch it on TV it doesn’t look too much. You have to have been caned to know exactly how bad that could be. It could easily kill you.

My experience of violence began at home. A slap on the bare legs, an occasional sting across the legs with a cane kept at the side of the boiler. My parents weren’t heavily into violence. I probably deserved it and a lot more. It was a half-hearted affair. My sister and I hid the cane. My parents were only going along with the perceived wisdom. Corporal punishment was the done thing.

The next step in the chain was school. By all accounts I could be a lively lad. If you misbehaved you would be sent out of the classroom for a period of time- probably just five minutes. That was a time of terror. Our ogre of a Head teacher prowled. If she found you outside you knew she would hit you with a ruler. The fear was the worst part – well not quite. Depending on what you had done or her mood as to what happened. A few slaps with the face of the ruler over upturned hands stung a bit but wasn’t too bad. The face of the ruler over the back of the hands was worse, but the real killer was the edge of the ruler over the backs of the fingers.

I still remember standing outside the door in dread with every sense straining and the sense of relief if the door opened and I was beckoned back in.

The real brutality began in our secondary school. It started in week one.

The PE teacher was a British gymnast; a sturdy guy with muscles on his muscles. Wearing a singlet and joggers to show off his imposing physique he lined us eleven-year-old innocents up along a line in the sports hall. Behind him was a chair with a long whippy cane laid over it. He explained to us that this was his ‘chopper’ and ‘chopping block’. If we dared to step out of line we’d meet the two of them. That didn’t look like something we’d enjoy.

He then went on to describe what he would like us to do for our first PE lesson. It was quite straightforward. It did not require a lesson plan. We were to run around the outside of the courts marked out in the hall. He picked up his cane and slapped it into his hand menacingly. Anybody who stepped inside the lines would get a whack. The last one round would get a whack.

Basically he stood there whacking us as we ran around the hall for 30 minutes. He loved his job. By the end of the ‘lesson’ about half the class had blood dribbling down their legs. Job done.

In our school all the teachers could dish out punishments while the Headmaster dispensed formalised floggings. The prefects could deliver two swishes of the cane and gleefully dragged their victims under the school for summary kangaroo trials and punishment.

In lessons punishments ranged from having chalk and wooden blackboard rubbers thrown at you (I was knocked unconscious in one maths lesson), to being lifted out of your seat by an ear (excruciatingly painful) as well as the standard slipper and cane. At times school resembled a war zone.

I have a theory that a lot of this violence was caused by traumatised servicemen who had been fast-tracked into teaching on being demobbed after the war (apart from the obvious sadists and perverts who had gone into the profession for the pleasure of caning young boys (girls were not caned on their bums – that would have been too much!).

A formal caning was a brutal affair. You could choose to take your punishment ‘like a man’ and bend over to grip the sides of the desk or, if you rebelled against the punishment you were manhandled and held by either prefects or staff. The Headteacher retreated to the other end of his study and hurtled down at the victim with the cane raised high. He’s jump in the air and bring the cane down on the raised buttocks with as much force as he could muster. It made a loud thud and elicited a cry or at least an intake of breath as a searing pain scorched the brain.

The end result of this swipe was a physical reaction. Sometimes the skin would be split but more often than not you ended up with a welt – a raised livid red line; a hardened ridge, as if the outrage area of impact was tensing itself, gritting its teeth, straining every fibre and had turned to stone. The area around went bright red as blood flowed in a vain attempt to repair the damage. It throbbed like a metronomic volcanic eruption. It was agony to touch. This ridge would metamorphosis through many stages over the course of days. The hardened ridge melting into a deep purple bruise. The irate crimson streak would form a scab. Over weeks the deep purple would spread out and slowly progress through brown to a dissipating yellow like a melting funeral rainbow. With six of these bastards the whole of your arse formed a Jackson Pollock of pain.  The pain was so intense that the victim was excused sitting. You could stand for a day. Who said that the establishment was heartless, callous and cruel?

Mind you, the threat of caning could be used against them.

I remember on one occasion the whole thing rebounding horribly against the bastards.

Terry Bolton was troublesome. A big lad with presence. A fighter, a bully, a young man with attitude. I wouldn’t say he was a rebel because he had no cause. He was just an arrogant lump of teenage attitude. A bad lad. The girls went crazy for him. Caning was a regular event – the price to pay. Indeed it added to his whole charisma of being a hard dude.

The school authority had had enough. They decided to teach him a lesson. The whole school was summoned and we sat in the hall while a table and cane were deployed. Terry, who was in year 10 or 11, a strapping fifteen-year-old, was sitting towards the back. We all knew what was coming. He knew. Atmosphere was electric. Everyone was hanging on the cusp of expectation.

Terry was called up by the deputy as the Head stood flexing his weapon at the side of the stage. Nonchalantly Terry rose from the seated ranks. He strolled swaggering down the aisle to the place of execution with a defiant smile on his face. James Dean could not have produced a better performance.

Staff were poised in the wings as Terry was invited to bend over the table. What was he going to do? Would he meekly obey? Our eyes were no longer saucers they were dinner plates. Our mouths were open. What was going to happen?

Terry glanced around at us, grinned and outrageously winked. Theatrically he bent over the table, gripping the sides in the prescribed manner, making sure that he was facing us.

For a minute the tableau was set in stone.

The head launched himself, sprinting from the wings, sprang into the air and brought the cane down upon Terry’s raised buttocks with every ounce of power that he possessed. Our imaginations provided the explosion of pain. We were all watching Terry intently. THHHWWWAAAACKKK!! Not a flinch, not a flicker, no tightening of fingers, no change of expression, if anything a bored look of indifference. Let’s get this over.

THHHWWWAAAACKKK!! THHHWWWAAAACKKK!! THHHWWWAAAACKKK!! THHHWWWAAAACKKK!! THHHWWWAAAACKKK!!.

It was over. Terry slowly pulled himself up to his full height, smiled at the Head,(is that the best you’ve got?) slowly surveyed the hall and then casually swaggered back down the steps, sauntered down the aisle and very deliberately sat down.

We were in awe. They had successfully turned Terry into a magnificent hero!

When the ultimate deterrent ceases to be a threat what have you got left?

Caning in Schools – a real incident – A passion for Education – The story of a Headteacher

This was a real incident from my early days in teaching. I myself was caned at school. I resented it. It filled me with fury. I still feel it. Caning creates violence.

A passion for Education – The story of a Headteacher

I was a young teacher in my second year of teaching. The current Headteacher Mr Walton had decided that the field should be out of bounds. The wet weather had created such muddy conditions that the classrooms and corridors were becoming caked with mud. He informed the staff that anyone walking on the grass would be caned. He was hoping this deterrent would solve the problem.

He hadn’t reckoned with Terry. He was a young student from the new comprehensive intake who had been a problem from the start and was no respecter of rules. Indeed it appeared that Terry regarded rules as a challenge. He earned the respect of his fellow students by flouting rules with blatant disdain.

Terry was the perennial thorn in the side of the school. He was loud, aggressive, rude and surly. He disrupted lessons, picked fights and openly defied everyone and everything.

I was walking down the corridor when I was asked by the Head to assist with the apprehension of young Terry. He had been brought to the Head for flagrantly walking on the grass and when he had ascertained his fate he had promptly got up and run away. This was not playing the game. The Head was used to Grammar School boys. They took their punishment like a man. They didn’t run away!

We went hunting for Terry.

Soon Terry was found. But Terry refused to come quietly and what followed is indelibly imprinted in my mind.

Two burly male teachers marched Terry down the corridor to the Head’s study. Terry was screaming and struggling. When he started kicking out at the two staff two other male staff grabbed his ankles and lifted him off the ground. He was carried headfirst, screaming and writhing along the corridor and he was manhandled into the study. I followed in the wake.

By this time the Head had become angry. His authority had been challenged. What originally was one stripe was now six. He intended to make an example of Terry.

The four male staff had to drag Terry to the desk and physically restrain him by all four limbs; each taking an ankle or wrist and tugging so that Terry was pinned across the desk like a frog awaiting dissection. All the while Terry continued to shriek and struggle to his utmost. He certainly had a florid vocabulary for a thirteen year old.

The Head retreated to the other side of the room and then ran, jumped in the air and brought the cane swishing through the air with all the force he could muster.

Terry screamed and went taut in some great spasm. Then he resumed his struggles in a futile desperate attempt to free himself from the four staff.

The Head repeated this five more times.

At the end of it they let Terry loose and he stood in the doorway with knotted fists and purple face swearing at the six of us.

Some say that caning does no harm. That it is a deterrent. The blood running down Terry’s legs from the split skin on his bum was not the harm. In my opinion the hatred and loathing in his mind were the injuries that would leave the everlasting scars. They wouldn’t heal.

As for deterrence – it was the same string of surly, defiant individuals who were paraded for beatings every week.

A passion for Education – The story of a Headteacher eBook : Goodwin BSc (Hons) NPQH, Christopher: Amazon.co.uk: Kindle Store

Caning – a deterrent, a source of great resentment and anger, an inhumane punishment??

Here’s a true story:

I was a young teacher in my second year of teaching. The current Headteacher Mr Walton had decided that the field should be out of bounds. The wet weather had created such muddy conditions that the classrooms and corridors were becoming caked with mud. He informed the staff that anyone walking on the grass would be caned. He was hoping this deterrent would solve the problem.

He hadn’t reckoned with Terry. He was a young student from the new comprehensive intake who had been a problem from the start and was no respecter of rules. Indeed it appeared that Terry regarded rules as a challenge. He earned the respect of his fellow students by flouting rules with blatant disdain.

Terry was the perennial thorn in the side of the school. He was loud, aggressive, rude and surly. He disrupted lessons, picked fights and openly defied everyone and everything.

I was walking down the corridor when I was asked by the Head to assist with the apprehension of young Terry. He had been brought to the Head for flagrantly walking on the grass and when he had ascertained his fate he had promptly got up and run away. This was not playing the game. The Head was used to Grammar School boys. They took their punishment like a man. They didn’t run away!

We went hunting for Terry.

Soon Terry was found. But Terry refused to come quietly and what followed is indelibly imprinted in my mind.

Two burly male teachers marched Terry down the corridor to the Head’s study. Terry was screaming and struggling. When he started kicking out at the two staff two other male staff grabbed his ankles and lifted him off the ground. He was carried headfirst, screaming and writhing along the corridor and he was manhandled into the study. I followed in the wake.

By this time the Head had become angry. His authority had been challenged. What originally was one stripe was now six. He intended to make an example of Terry.

The four male staff had to drag Terry to the desk and physically restrain him by all four limbs; each taking an ankle or wrist and tugging so that Terry was pinned across the desk like a frog awaiting dissection. All the while Terry continued to shriek and struggle to his utmost. He certainly had a florid vocabulary for a thirteen year old.

The Head retreated to the other side of the room and then ran, jumped in the air and brought the cane swishing through the air with all the force he could muster.

Terry screamed and went taut in some great spasm. Then he resumed his struggles in a futile desperate attempt to free himself from the four staff.

The Head repeated this five more times.

At the end of it they let Terry loose and he stood in the doorway with knotted fists and purple face swearing at the six of us.

Some say that caning does no harm. That it is a deterrent. The blood running down Terry’s legs from the split skin on his bum was not the harm. In my opinion the hatred and loathing in his mind were the injuries that would leave the everlasting scars. They wouldn’t heal.

As for deterrence – it was the same string of surly, defiant individuals who were paraded for beatings every week.

In the UK:

In the USA:

 

Anecdote – Terry and the public caning – bullying in public – backfiring!

AppleMark

Terry and the public caning

If caning made me sullen, disdainful and confrontational that was nothing to what it did to some of my fellow students. To a number of them it became a badge of honour. It gave them status and power.

Their disdain for being caned took all the school’s power away. These miscreants learnt to cope with the pain and their insolence merely undermined the authority of the teachers. Their attitude was ‘Is that the best you can do?’

They were immune. There was nothing the school could do.

This was exemplified by Terry. He was the class hardnut. He’d been caned so much that I was sure that his arse had become leather. He also had a pain threshold that was extraordinary.

I can’t remember what terrible crime Terry had carried out. I know he was capable of just about anything. He was a big bully and a thug at times. He was confrontational and he’d once pushed our English teacher through the glass of a bookcase cabinet. Looking back it is hard to believe that he wasn’t expelled. But they had decided to make a public example of him. We were in Year 10. Regardless of anything else it was a bit late. He was far too entrenched to change.

A full school special assembly was called. Trevor, who must have known what was going on, was sitting with the rest of us on the floor in the big hall. When we were all settled, Terry was called up.

I think that the whole idea was to create a public spectacle that would show any miscreants what happened if you stepped out of line.

It failed miserably in all respects.

Right from the start it was clear that the venture was a failure.

Instead of looking frightened and apprehensive Terry looked as if he was going up for a prize. He was centre stage and he loved it. He stood up slowly grinning round at everyone and, with hands in pockets, slouched up the central aisle towards the stage, a knowing smile on his face.

All eyes were on him. They knew how much this was going to hurt. They had no doubt as to the viciousness of what was about to happen. The school wanted to break Terry. They were going to do their utmost.

Terry was equally adamant. This was his big chance. He knew the procedure and he was determined to milk it.

The gym teacher, the biggest bully on the staff, had been deployed to apply the punishment. He stood to one side of the stage.

Terry looked round at the hushed hall. All eyes were fixed on him. I can still see his smiling face. This wasn’t a brave mask. He seemed to be enjoying it.

I cannot remember a word being spoken though I’m sure we were lectured on Terry’s crimes and what happened to people who stepped out of line.

Terry was motioned to the table on the stage. He was calm and compliant. He bent over, gripped the edges of the table and laid his head down looking out at us.

Then he winked at us and grinned widely.

The gym teacher actually bounded across and jumped into the air to bring that cane down with all the force he could muster.

I watched Terry intently. There was no discernible tightening of his grip on that table, his eyes did not blink, and the smile never left his mouth or eyes. It was an act that was almost beyond belief. He took that huge blow without flinching.

I knew the unbelievable pain that had to be shrieking from his buttocks. I could imagine the welt it produced and the blood trickling down his legs. Yet Terry did not show the slightest indication of that excruciating pain. It was more than impressive.

When all six blows had been delivered, Terry rose majestically, looked the Head straight in the eyes, turned and grinned insolently at the Gym teacher who looked far more agitated by the experience than Terry did, and then strolled back down from the stage.

Terry swaggered back down the aisle like a hero with the whole school fixed on him. He returned to his place and looked around, as if taking a bow, and then sat down on the hard floor as if nothing had happened.

Caning in schools – a disgusting barbaric act.

AppleMark

Caning

I was caned a number of times. I cannot even remember why. I hadn’t done anything major.

The experience certainly did not fill me with a desire to keep on the straight and narrow. It filled me with fury and hatred.

I found the experience humiliating and extremely painful.

In my school teachers could cane you with up to six strokes and prefects could give you three.

Some people believe it creates better discipline and inculcates respect. It doesn’t. It creates fear and dislike.

On one occasion I was bent over the desk in front of the class and given three strokes with a thin cane. He put all the force into it that he could muster. I was determined not to react but I could not resist. It was excruciating. It made me gasp and brought tears to my eyes. I felt all those eyes on me and was embarrassed and humiliated that I could not control my response.

With reddened face and streaming eyes I was sent back to my place and allowed to stand. That was fortunate because it hurt so much that I don’t think I could have sat down.

That cane broke the skin in a long line across my buttocks. Under that split skin it swelled into a long hard welt three quarters of an inch wide. That remained solid for over a day. I had three of these long stripes across my bum. They gradually softened and subsided. The bruising was purple and then gradually spread into great brown and purple bruises over the whole of my buttocks. It was painful for a long time. I had to sleep on my front.

In terms of my attitude and behaviour – the fury and hatred did not die away with the bruising. I was not merely resentful I was consumed with hatred. I lost interest in the lessons and despised the teachers concerned and did everything I could to get back at them.

Caning produces quiet classrooms and poor education.

I took those experiences with me into my teaching career. Education is about relationship. When it worked best for me was when I was in a classroom with a bunch of eager students, lots of humour, exchanges and laughter, mutual respect, and a love of the subject. I did not need a cane.

Sadly, when I went home after my caning experience, my parents took the attitude that I must have deserved it.

They were wrong.