Forum Views ()
Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Beating ban stirs debate in S. Korean schools
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
More Yahoo! Services
Account Options
New User? Sign Up
Sign In
Help
Yahoo! Search
web search
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Weekend Edition
World
Beating ban stirs debate in S. Korean schools
AFP - Saturday, February 12
Send
IM Story
Print
Beating ban stirs debate in S. Korean schools
SEOUL (AFP) - – With the new school year starting in March, high school teacher Jennifer Chung is worried about coping without her longtime classroom companion --- a hickory stick for smacking misbehaving students.
"I don't know if I can survive the jungle of 40 restless boys in each class, let alone keeping them quiet with no means to punish them," said the 36-year-old maths teacher in Gyeonggi province surrounding Seoul.
Education authorities in Seoul, the country's largest school district with 1.36 million pre-college students, last November banned corporal punishment.
Gyeonggi and one other province followed suit, with the new rule to take effect there in March.
The move has sparked intense debate in South Korea, where education is highly valued and physical punishment has long been tolerated -- if not encouraged -- to discipline students and push them to excel.
Entry to a prestigious college or university largely determines a career path and even marriage prospects. So parents and teachers often drive children to work harder through physical pain.
Slapping or spanking is a common punishment for missing homework, performing poorly in exams or chatting too loudly during class.
Children breaking school rules may be ordered to do push-ups, hold their arms straight above their heads or walk the playground in a squatting position known as a "duck-walk".
One survey showed about 70 percent of high school students experience corporal punishment. But injuries from severe beatings have sometimes led to bitter lawsuits filed by parents and jail terms for teachers.
Kim Dong-Seok, a spokesman for the Korean Federation of Teachers Unions, said overcrowded classrooms and pressure to get students into good colleges prompt educators to rely on tough and quick discipline.
"With about 40 students in each class and all parents demanding that their children go to good colleges, you just can't do the job without physical punishment," he said.
Each class in South Korean schools has 35.3 students on average, one of the highest among OECD member countries whose average is 23.9.
"It's the parents who still want teachers to use physical methods to make their children fare better in exams," Kim said.
But a four-minute video clip of a Seoul elementary school classroom made public in July ignited a debate that for long was the preserve of minority groups of liberal teachers and parents.
A cellphone video taken by a pupil showed a cursing and yelling middle-aged teacher smack the face of a sixth grader, hurl him to the floor and kick him repeatedly.
Seoul's education office, headed by a newly-elected former liberal education activist, seized on the public fury to ban all corporal punishment in schools later that year.
"Corporal punishment is barbaric, inhumane and often used by teachers simply to release their own anger. What's worse, it makes youngsters take violence in everyday life for granted," said Cho Shin, a spokesman for the office.
"No one had mustered the courage to put an end to this vicious, longstanding cycle. But now is the time to end it, no matter how tough it is doing so," he told AFP.
Teachers, however, say the sudden policy switch leaves them with few disciplinary alternatives.
"Some really rebellious kids already taunt me when I try to scold them for chatting too loudly during a class, saying 'Should I take out my cell phone?' or 'Now you're not supposed to hit me, are you?'" said one Seoul high school teacher who declined to be named.
Kim of the teacher's union said complaints had poured in from teachers since last year -- especially from women teachers who said they were harassed or beaten by students in response to scolding.
"We know times have changed and we shouldn't be hitting the students. But we really need other ways to punish those flouting rules and disrupting classes," he said.
Options suggested by the education office -- summoning parents or sending students to special self-reflection classes -- are little real use, he said, given the lack of special instructors and no clear guidance for parents.
Students are equally divided. A private survey last month of 23,000 middle and high school students showed about 50 percent support corporal punishment in classrooms while 40 percent are opposed and 10 percent undecided.
"When I get hit by teachers, I think that's usually for a good reason and I deserve it, though I feel a bit humiliated," said Jeon Jun-Su, a high school senior in the south-central city of Gimcheon.
"If I do something wrong, I'd rather get hit a few times than have my parents summoned. It's far easier and more convenient," he said.
The national education ministry last month tried to ease the controversy by allowing punishment that involves no beating such as push-ups. But Seoul's education office pledged to stick with the all-out ban, further confusing teachers.
"We are in the middle of a messy, chaotic transition," said Kim Chang-Hwan, a researcher at the Korean Educational Development Institute.
The researcher said the pervasive military culture under army-backed rule through the 1960s-1980s played a role in highlighting physical discipline in education, which should vanish eventually.
"This may be the price South Korean schools must pay for relying too much on physical punishment instead of using it as the last resort," he said.
Recommend
Send
IM Story
Print
Related Articles
US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary Reuters - 1 hour 23 minutes ago
Behind-the-scenes of Glee's music Reuters - 1 hour 24 minutes ago
Spacey, Moore tackle financial crisis at Berlin fest AFP - 1 hour 39 minutes ago
Lady Gaga's new single compared to Madonna Reuters - 2 hours 6 minutes ago
German cross-eyed opossum to predict Oscars on TV Reuters - 2 hours 21 minutes ago
News Search
Top Stories
US unveils housing market overhaul
Egypt Live Report
US trade gap widens as China deficit hits record
De Beers returns to profit in boom year for diamonds
S. African wins World Press Photo award
More Top Stories »
ADVERTISEMENT
Most Popular
Most Viewed
US golfer Woods finds old habits hard to shake
Russia loses military satellite: reports
US auto sales jump 17 percent in January
Dow closes over 12,000 for first time since June 2008
Egypt's Mubarak to step down at September election
More Most Viewed »
More Most Recommended »
Elsewhere on Yahoo!
Financial news on Yahoo! Finance
Stars and latest movies
Best travel destinations
More on Yahoo! News
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Weekend Edition
Subscribe to our news feeds
Top StoriesMy Yahoo!RSS
» More news feeds | What are news feeds?
Also on Yahoo!
Answers
Groups
Mail
Messenger
Mobile
Travel
Finance
Movies
Sports
Games
» All Yahoo! Services
Site Highlights
Singapore
Full Coverage
Most Popular
Entertainment
Photos
Yahoo! News Network
Copyright © 2011 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte. Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Service |
Privacy Policy |
Community |
Intellectual Property Rights Policy |
Help
Other News on Saturday, 12 February 2011 Egypt Live Report
Assange made 'enemy number one': lawyer
Assange lawyer says Swedish PM prejudices case
Egypt Live Report
'Beware friendly US,' Ahmadinejad warns Egyptians
Swiss father admitted to 'killing missing twins'
End of Mubarak era as protests topple president
US unveils housing market overhaul
Swiss freeze possible Mubarak assets
|
US trade gap widens as China deficit hits record
Mubarak steps down: Vice President
Gaza celebrates Mubarak exit; Hamas demands change
|
Instant view
Brazil arrests 35 in swoop on Rio police corruption
|
Egyptians' reaction to Mubarak stepping down
US-TECH Summary
Cuba releases another political prisoner
|
South Sudan army clashes with renegade kill 105
Nokia joins forces with Microsoft to beat competition
Egypt minister plays down military role
7.0 quake shakes Chile capital Santiago: USGS
|
Egypt army says ready to lift state of emergency
Wave of Tunisian migrant arrivals alarms Italy
|
Japan emperor diagnosed with artery condition
Saving south Sudan's 'lost mothers'
Dogs sexier than smartphones: Retrevo
10 Indonesians arrested over religious violence
Cartoon news is the future: Hong Kong media mogul
Global minimum and maximum temperatures
Beating ban stirs debate in S. Korean schools
Lacroix celebrates allure of the Orient
Astronaut's space tales aim to inspire
Smartphone makers to woo developers in Barcelona
|
Groupon pulls controversial Tibet Super Bowl ads
|
Micron upbeat on DRAM and NAND memory prices
|
Telus profit surges on data and wireless revenue
|
Lady Gaga's new single compared to Madonna
|
US-TECH Summary
Jeff Beck hopes to make a Commotion at Grammys
|
Smartphone makers to woo developers in Barcelona
Behind-the-scenes of Glee's music
|
German cross-eyed opossum to predict Oscars on TV
|
New dawn for Egypt as Mubarak toppled
Diplomatic crisis over Frenchwoman jailed in Mexico
World leaders hail Mubarak resignation
Egyptian activist creates image issues for Google
Father of missing twins revealed he killed girls: police
Republicans plan cuts to US State Dept, UN contribution
Fireworks, carnival erupt at toppling of "Pharaoh"
Activision says sharper focus will pay off
Jubilant Egyptians pray as post-Mubarak era dawns
|
Swedish PM 'harmed chances of Assange fair trial': lawyer
US unveils housing market overhaul
FACTBOX-Egyptian opposition reaction to Mubarak resignation
Telus profit surges on data and wireless revenue
US trade gap widens as China deficit hits record
Google says 'I do' to wedding planning
From London to New York, Egyptians are jubilant
Diplomacy stalemate over North Korea's nuclear programme
|
Nokia joins forces with Microsoft in mobile phone 'war'
Obama urges Egyptian army to ensure democratic change
Top U.S. military officer to visit Israel and Jordan
|
Gaza celebrates Mubarak exit; Hamas demands change
Groupon pulls Tibet, whales, rainforest ads
Support for Japan government drops below 20 percent: survey
|
Factbox
Colombian FARC rebels release two more hostages
|
Could smartphones go stupid?
Systematic rape continues on Congo-Angola border: U.N.
|
Web makes 15 mins fame a lifetime of shame
Australian newspaper boss arrested in Myanmar
Liz Taylor in hospital for heart condition
World leaders hail Mubarak resignation
Groupon pulls controversial Tibet Super Bowl ads
Witness: Joy at Mubarak's demise contrasts with tense accession
|
German cross-eyed opossum to predict Oscars on TV
Liu Xiang in third on European return
US-TECH Summary
China downplays news of Egyptian uprising
Nokia joins forces with Microsoft in mobile phone 'war'
China AIDS activist gets 1-year prison sentence
Myanmar junta tells people to protect 'democracy'
Soul legend Franklin takes in Pistons game
Weather forecast for the Asia-Pacific region
US-ENTERTAINMENT Summary
Taiwan protests name change in banking group
"King's Speech" expected to pass $200 million
Al Pacino to play Matisse in new movie
Liz Taylor in hospital for heart condition
Egyptian activist creates image issues for Google
|
Activision says sharper focus will pay off
|
Elizabeth Taylor treated for congestive heart failure
Rihanna rehearsing for Grammys despite illness
Angelina Jolie denies reports of Haiti adoption
Luxor a tourist ghost town amid uprising
Pakistan flag-carrier's head resigns to end strike
Behind-the-scenes of Glee's music
Pakistan national airline staff end strike -pilots
Pakistani rupee at 8-½ month high; stocks fall sharply
Pakistani airline employees end 4-day strike
Elizabeth Taylor treated for congestive heart failure
|
Angelina Jolie denies reports of Haiti adoption
|
King's Speech expected to pass $200 million
|
Rihanna rehearsing for Grammys despite illness
|
Greece blasts EU-IMF asset sale demand
Yap.TV lets viewers chat as they watch
Erik Guay claims ski world downhill gold
Obama's high-speed rail faces political challenge
Palestinian Authority calls election
|
Algeria police stifle Egypt-inspired protest
|
Armed Yemeni government supporters break up protest
|
Suicide bomber kills 28 and wounds dozens in Iraq
|
Pakistan court orders arrest of ex-president Musharraf
|
Taliban assault on Afghanistan police headquarters kills 16
|
Civil servant in Fujian paid for doing nothing
Witness: Will history repeat itself in Egypt?
|
Taiwan president directs government to monitor commodity prices
Dong devaluation no worry for Thai exports
Diesel subsidy extended again in Thailand, biofuel content cut
Thriving spas draw tourists to Bali
S. Korea's central bank puts off key rate hike
Chicago conductor gets pacemaker after fall
Pakistan International Airlines flies as MD quits
Two insurgents, policeman killed in South Thailand
Pakstani c.bank to buy t-bills in 6-day reverse-repo
S. Korea strives to curb home rent prices
Indian exports up 32.5 percent on Western demand
Norwegian investors in Pakistan to be given full security: PM
Assange lawyer says Swedish PM prejudices case
|
Rock 'n' roll on sick list as Grammys and fans go pop
|
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights