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Corporal punishment takes research hit. (Behavior).


At some time or another, most children in the United States experience corporal punishment corporal punishment, physical chastisement of an offender. At one extreme it includes the death penalty (see capital punishment), but the term usually refers to punishments like flogging, mutilation, and branding. Until c.1800, in many parts of the world, most crimes were punished thus, or by such practices as confinement in the pillory or stocks, which combined physical chastisement with the humiliation of an individual possible in a relatively small, cohesive, such as spanking, without suffering harmful effects on their behavior or mental health. However, studies conducted over the past 62 years indicate that the more often and the more harshly parents resort to physical reprimands, the more likely their kids are to become aggressive, delinquent, and depressed, contends psychologist Elizabeth T. Gershoff of Columbia University.

In the absence of reports of any long-term benefit to behavior from corporal punishment, "we as psychologists cannot responsibly recommend its use," she concludes. Her analysis of 88 past studies of corporal punishment appears in the July Psychological Bulletin.

Children do comply with their parents' demands more quickly just after being physically punished, Gershoff says. However, there's no evidence that the practice instills a sense of right from wrong to guide behavior when parents aren't around, in her view.

Parents who use corporal punishment are more likely than those who don't to physically abuse their children, Gershoff adds. Physical abuse is defined as inflicting injuries through acts such as punching, kicking, and burning.

Several commenters registered contrasting views in the same issue of Psychological Bulletin. The data indicate only that some parents use excessive force in punishing their children, contributing to later problems for those kids, say psychologist Diana Baumrind of the University of California, Berkeley and her colleagues. "A blanket injunction against spanking is not justified by the evidence" they argue.--B.B.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 3, 2002
Words:243
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