Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Corporal punishment may have long-term negative effects on children's intelligence
27 July 2011 [20:40] - Today.Az
Children in a school that uses corporal punishment performed significantly worse in tasks involving "executive functioning" -- psychological processes such as planning, abstract thinking, and delaying gratification -- than those in a school relying on milder disciplinary measures such as time-outs, according to a new study involving two private schools in a West African country.
The findings, published by the journal Social Development,
suggest that a harshly punitive environment may have long-term
detrimental effects on children's verbal intelligence and their
executive-functioning ability. As a result, children exposed to a
harshly punitive environment may be at risk for behavioral problems
related to deficits in executive-functioning, the study indicates.
The study -- by Prof. Victoria Talwar of McGill University, Prof.
Stephanie M. Carlson of the University of Minnesota, and Prof. Kang Lee
of the University of Toronto, involved 63 children in kindergarten or
first grade at two West African private schools. Their families lived in
the same urban neighborhood. The parents were largely civil servants,
professionals and merchants.
In one school, discipline in the form of beating with a stick,
slapping of the head, and pinching was administered publicly and
routinely for offenses ranging from forgetting a pencil to being
disruptive in class. In the other school, children were disciplined for
similar offenses with the use of time-outs and verbal reprimands.
While overall performance on the executive-functioning tasks was
similar in the younger children from both schools, the Grade 1 children
in the non-punitive school scored significantly higher than those in the
punitive school. These results are consistent with research findings
that punitive discipline may make children immediately compliant -- but
may reduce the likelihood that they will internalize rules and
standards. That, in turn, may result in lower self-control as children
get older.
"This study demonstrates that corporal punishment does not teach
children how to behave or improve their learning," Prof. Talwar said.
"In the short term, it may not have any negative effects; but if relied
upon over time it does not support children's problem-solving skills, or
their abilities to inhibit inappropriate behaviour or to learn."
Despite the age-old debate over the effects of corporal punishment,
few studies have examined the effects on executive-functioning ability.
This new study uses a quasi-experimental design to derive data from a
naturally occurring situation in which children were exposed to two
different disciplinary environments. The parents of children in both
schools endorsed physical punishment equally, suggesting that the school
environment can account for the differences found.
There are many further questions that remain unanswered. "We are now
examining whether being in a punitive environment day in and day out
will have other negative impacts on children such as lying or other
covert antisocial behaviors. Also, we are pursuing the long term
consequences of experiencing corporal punishment. For example, what
would children's cognitive and social development be 5 or 10 years down
the road?," said Prof. Kang Lee.
The findings are relevant to current controversy. "In the U.S., 19
states still allow corporal punishment in schools, although more of them
are now asking for parent permission to use it. With this new evidence
that the practice might actually undermine children's cognitive skills
needed for self-control and learning, parents and policy makers can be
better informed," said Prof. Stephanie M. Carlson.
/Science Daily/
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