Corpun file 22969
The Nation, Bangkok, 16 January 2011
Many Thais favour use of cane for unruly youths: poll
Most people favour the re-introduction of caning - allowing
teachers to be able to cane students again as a punishment. But
they feel it should only be used in limited circumstances and
with clear conditions including size of the cane, a Suan Dusit
Poll revealed yesterday.
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Caning is now banned under the Ministry of Education's
regulations on student punishment amended in 2005.
Some 1,476 teachers, students and parents around the country
were interviewed from January 13-15 after a website published a
video clip of a teacher caning students and the Students' Council
called for the Education Ministry to change its rules to allow
pupils to be caned.
Some 54 per cent of respondents agreed with the council's call
on the grounds that youngsters would be chastened for doing
wrong. But they urged that use of the cane be rational,
restricted for certain offences and in supervised conditions,
with a limit on the size of the cane.
But 19 per cent of respondents disagreed on grounds that it
would affect kids mentally, make them scared of school or
expressing opinions, and that it was violent and should not
replace rational talking and other punishments.
Some 34 per cent said offences that warranted caning included
drinking alcohol, smoking, gambling, and illicit romantic
liaisons, while 28 per cent who said students should be caned for
getting into a fist fight and 21 per cent said pupils who skipped
classes should be caned.
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