71% of children believed it's okay to be beaten up 'for a reason', having been taught its for 'their own good' and 'necessary'.
A
toxic combination of poverty, poorly-paid teachers with anti-migrant
prejudice and a lack of training on nonviolent discipline in
government
schools means marginalised children are significantly more likely
to experience corporal punishment, said a new study.
Corporal
punishment is a form of violence
against children and is illegal in India.
Yet
80% of marginalised children report being punished by teachers, while
an average of 43% said they were regularly beaten, up to three times
a week, according to a new report by Agrasar, an NGO. In some schools
the number of regularly beaten students rose to 88%.
The
abuse does not end along with the school day. The majority of these
children also experienced beatings at home (74%), while a similar
proportion of parents admitting to doling out beatings at home (71%).
These
are the findings of a survey from a randomised sample of 521 children
and 100 parents in Gurugram, an area which experienced a 29% increase
in migrant arrivals between 2000 and 2011, largely from poorer
states, such as Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Uttarakhand and Madhya Pradesh.
However,
“given that the same mechanisms of economic deprivation and social
exclusion are at work, the findings apply to disadvantaged children
elsewhere in India”, the report said.
No
positive outcomes of corporal punishment have been found, while it is
established that physical and mental forms of abuse can have a
detrimental effect on child health and wellbeing, including
mental-health problems, behavioural issues and cognitive ability,
according to the report.(Business
Standard)
The
fear and stress associated with corporal punishment can create
“school-phobia”, leading to increased dropouts, low-retention
rates and poor academic scores, significantly impacting on education
outcomes, the report said. Children who have experienced such abuse
are also more likely to display criminal behaviour, commit violent
crimes as adults and suffer from substance abuse.
In
1992, India became one of 128 countries to agree to the United
Nations (UN) Convention of Rights of the Child 1989, which outlawed
school corporal punishment and required the government under article
28(2) to ensure that “school discipline is administered in a manner
consistent with the child's human dignity”... Read
More
No comments:
Post a Comment