Victorian teachers were stricter than the teachers of today and often used to beat the pupils to make them behave. In the early days of the schools the teachers found it hard to get pupils used to what was expected of them.
The school Log Book records that "..one of the boys misbehaved during his presence, and I had to punish him for it after he left; he pinched another boy while reading, and thus caused him to laugh..."
The entry goes on:
"... it is the same boy who played the truant, and causes the whole of the disturbance in the school: the work being twice as easy when he is absent: I don't like to expel him owing to his parents, who are very nice respectable people, & desire me always to do justice to the boy."
In Victorian schools the children did their ordinary rough work on slates with a piece of chalk or a rough pencil. The Head teacher at New Radnor school punished children for copyingfrom each other's slates.
Tudor school rules..hmm..Anyone caught gambling or drinking will be given a beating.Anyone who is late to school will be given a beating.Any trips to alehouses during school time will be resulted in a beating.Anyone who put their elbows on the table will be given a beating.Anyone who loses or misplaces their cap will be given 3 whips.Hope I helped :)From ANONYMOUS (aged 13) lol x
The 1500s is the Tudor period. School punishments consisted of severe birching (whipping with the birch rod, i.e. a thick heavy bundle of birch twigs tied on the end of a stick). Birching was administered to the bare buttocks, with the pupil kneeling and bent over a school 'flogging block', and could be as many as 50 strokes. As the punishment progressed, the pupil's bottom and upper thighs, including the exposed anoperineal region, would be whipped until the whole area became a mass of raw flesh and ran with blood.
The most severe punishment during the Victorian period was death by hanging. If a criminal was not sentenced to hang then they would have been imprisoned, men would be sent to the armed forces, given a hard labor sentence or sent to the colonies (most often Australia).
Germany army decreased for example Germany was only allowed 6 battleships , army of 100,000 troops, Germany was blamed for the start off the war, places of Germany was taken away (Germany got smaller) any colonies Germany had they were given back,
gifts given to the world by heroes or people who are given national appreciation
after school or Saturday detention
Very, very strict with awesome punishments for trivial offences such as not understanding the subject taught to the children by the House Masters who probably didn't understand comprehensively the given subject themselves.
Because they had to by law otherwise they would get hung drawn and quartered
poopies
What did rich Victorian families eat for dinner and for special functions?
In the early public schools, punishments could include physical discipline such as caning, paddling, or standing in a corner. Students could also be given writing tasks or extra chores as a form of discipline.
The motto of The Schilling School for Gifted Children is 'From those to whom much is given, much is expected'.
potatoes
No. If they were working in one of the factories they didn't even get a bathroom break or lunch/dinner time.
Well, honey, back in the Victorian era, schools were like boot camps with strict discipline, rote memorization, and corporal punishment. Nowadays, we've got modern schools with more focus on creativity, critical thinking, and hopefully fewer rulers to the knuckles. So, in a nutshell, Victorian schools were like a scene from Oliver Twist, while modern schools are more like a hipster coffee shop with Wi-Fi.
sorry not answer yet.
They were usually given death sentence.