Yes. It is completely legal. Writing is a necessary part of education and to make students who don't like it is a form of punishment that has probably been used as long as language has existed.
yes don't do that its rude
Corporal punishment was used in schools to keep children well behaved.Studies have found that corporal punishment causes mental damage to children.In the UK, corporal punishment is illegal.
effect of the electronic media on students english learningin schools
because gay students will get erectid all the time and this will start fights
A school physican is the doctor students go to when they are ill or do not feel well. Most schools, however, have a school nurse.
I would say yes. Why do the teachers think us students are always so sleepy? Yes.hell ya
It is ILLEGAL in NYC, considered to be a form of corporal punishment. It is also ineffective.
Corporal punishment was used as a disciplinary method is most schools for many years. It has largely been made illegal in most western countries today.
Corporal punishment is now OUTLAWED in ALL UK schools.
Corporal punishment in schools was first allowed in the late 1950s. Teachers were allowed to use physical ways to get through to their students to help them further their education.
None of the states are allowed to use corporal punishment as criminal sentences. Corporal punishment in schools, however is still legal in 20 states. And domestic corporal punishment is legal in every state.
i strongly agree that detention should not be a punishment in schools,because if you want time off from looking after students i suggest you shoulnt have detention as a punishment.
i strongly agree that detention should not be a punishment in schools,because if you want time off from looking after students i suggest you shoulnt have detention as a punishment.
shouldn't be. They are legally responsible for you and there is no expectation of privacy
Australian state schools (public schools) do not use corporal punishment. A tiny number of independent schools still use corporal punishment, with the agreement of the parents.
This varies from state to state, and whether or not the school is a state school or a private school.Legislation to ban corporal punishment in all state schools was introduced in New South Wales in 1990, and this extended to private schools in 1997.It was banned in the ACT in 1997, and although the legislation states it is banned in "all schools", it does not explicitly include private schools.Tasmania banned corporal punishment in both public and private schools in 1999.Victoria first banned corporal punishment in public schools in 1989, and this extended to non-government schools in 2006.Queensland banned corporal punishment in state schools in 1995, but it is still legal in private schools.Corporal punishment in government schools in South Australia ended in 1991, but there are still moves to ban it in non-government schools. Interestingly, the legislation covering corporal punishment in both SA and Qld state schools is not actually legally binding, according to a paper published in May 2010.Western Australia abolished corporal punishment in state schools in 1999, but this does not extend to students in private schools.Corporal punishment is not explicitly banned in the Northern Territory, but there are moves in this direction.
Why not? Especially if it's a public school they have no right to restrict the outside activities of their students unless it damages their performance considerably or is illegal.
Corporal punishment in schools (generally punishment administered across the buttocks or on the hands with a paddle or yardstick) was certainly legal in all U.S. and U.K. schools in 1968. It was not banned in many states until the 1990s or later, and in some U.S. states (particularly Southern ones), it is still not illegal. The U.K. gradually banned corporal punishment over a period of time beginning in the late 1980s and stretching into the early 2000s.