Corporal Punishment in Florida Schools (December 4, 1976)

Corporal punishment, sometimes referred to as “physical punishment“ or “physical discipline“,[2] has been defined as the use of physical force, no matter how light, to cause deliberate bodily pain or discomfort in response to some undesired behavior.[3] In schools in the United States, corporal punishment takes the form of a school teacher or administrator striking a student’s buttocks with a wooden paddle (often called “spanking“ or “paddling“).[2] The practice was held constitutional in the 1977 Supreme Court case Ingraham v. Wright, where the Court held that the “cruel and unusual punishments“ clause of the Eighth Amendment did not apply to disciplinary corporal punishment in public schools, being restricted to the treatment of prisoners convicted of a crime.[4] In the years since, a number of U.S. states have banned corporal punishment in public schools.[2] The most recent state to outlaw it was Colorado in 2023,[5] and the latest de facto statewide ban was in North Carolina in 2018, when the last school district in the state that had not yet banned it did so. In 2014, a student was struck in a U.S. public school an average of once every 30 seconds.[6] As of 2023, corporal punishment is still legal in private schools in every U.S. state except New Jersey and Iowa, legal in public schools in 17 states, and practiced in 14 of the states.[citation needed]. Corporal punishment in school has been outlawed in Canada, the European Union and other European countries, and New Zealand, which makes the United States one of three developed countries where corporal punishment in school is still allowed, alongside Australia and Singapore; the state of Queensland is the only jurisdiction in Australia where school corporal punishment is still technically legal.[7][8] The practice is banned in 128 countries.[9]
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