Ballaro, Beverly, and Heather Newton. "Point: Corporal Punishment Has No Place In The United States." Points Of View: Corporal Punishment (2016): 2. Points of View Reference Center. Web. 1 Apr. 2016.
This article states that the use of corporal punishment is negatively affected the children it is used on, leaving them with higher violence rates as adults and possible emotional damage. It says that the use or corporal punishment in schools is a violation of child rights. This is an Ebscohost article, so it’s been peer reviewed and is credible.
"Corporal Punishment." Merriam-Webster.com. Merriam-Webster, n.d. Web. 4 Apr. 2016.
"Corporal Punishment: Teaching Violence Through Violence." Education World:. Web. 04 Apr. 2016.
Gives mostly just statistics of which schools had the higher rates of use of corporal punishment. It also states that schools are the only places in the United States that the hitting of another person is legal, nowhere else is it acceptable. I think it’s a pretty reliable piece, since it comes from another article I couldn’t reach but was from abcnews.com which is a news place.
Farrell, Courtney, and Geraldine Wagner. "Corporal Punishment: An Overview." Points Of View: Corporal Punishment (2016): 1.Points of View Reference Center. Web. 1 Apr. 2016.
This article gives a general background and knowledge about what corporal punishment is, and how it is affecting and surviving in today’s society. Talks mainly about what’s happening in the USA and the general people who support and are against it. I got this from Ebscohost, so it’s definitely credible.
Gershoff, Elizabeth, and Robert Larzelere. "Is Corporal Punishment an Effective Means of Discipline?" American Psychological Association. American Psychological Association, 26 June 2002. Web. 04 Apr. 2016.
This article is based around research done on several different effects that corporal punishment has on children. Most of them are negatively perceived effects, and the only positive one had negative thoughts around it, because of the reasons behind it. I think it’s a pretty reliable source because it’s from a website called apa.org and it has some legitimate research basis.
Lee, M., and Maureen McMahon. "Counterpoint: Corporal Punishment Is Necessary For Discipline And Safety." Points Of View: Corporal Punishment (2016): 3. Points of View Reference Center. Web. 4 Apr. 2016.
This one talks about how teachers should be allowed to use some moderate disciplinary measures to control problem children. It also addresses the whole spanking argument and explains how the use of corporal punishment is the best way to keep kids in line and keeps violence, probably between students, out of school. This article is from the Points of View Database and is therefore pretty reliable and trustable.
Stokely, Anne. "Point: The Negative Impact Of Corporal Punishment." Points Of View: Corporal Punishment (2016): 5. Points of View Reference Center. Web. 1 Apr. 2016.
Talks more about negative repercussions of using physical punishment on children and how adults are abusing their power over those without control. It also states what should be happening to the adults who are hitting kids, like more training for teachers by professionals and psychologists and the use of anger management techniques by parents. The Points of View website has lots of articles that are peer reviewed and research based, which makes it pretty credible, I think.
Wilson, Brian. "Counterpoint: The Benefits Of Corporal Punishment." Points Of View: Corporal Punishment (2016): 6. Points of View Reference Center. Web. 1 Apr. 2016.
This article explains how the use of corporal punishment could potentially be beneficial, if used appropriately. It focuses more on the aspect of intimidation rather than the actual hitting of the child. But it does seem to be a credible source thanks to the Points of View Reference Center’s allowance to be on their website.
This article states that the use of corporal punishment is negatively affected the children it is used on, leaving them with higher violence rates as adults and possible emotional damage. It says that the use or corporal punishment in schools is a violation of child rights. This is an Ebscohost article, so it’s been peer reviewed and is credible.
"Corporal Punishment." Merriam-Webster.com. Merriam-Webster, n.d. Web. 4 Apr. 2016.
"Corporal Punishment: Teaching Violence Through Violence." Education World:. Web. 04 Apr. 2016.
Gives mostly just statistics of which schools had the higher rates of use of corporal punishment. It also states that schools are the only places in the United States that the hitting of another person is legal, nowhere else is it acceptable. I think it’s a pretty reliable piece, since it comes from another article I couldn’t reach but was from abcnews.com which is a news place.
Farrell, Courtney, and Geraldine Wagner. "Corporal Punishment: An Overview." Points Of View: Corporal Punishment (2016): 1.Points of View Reference Center. Web. 1 Apr. 2016.
This article gives a general background and knowledge about what corporal punishment is, and how it is affecting and surviving in today’s society. Talks mainly about what’s happening in the USA and the general people who support and are against it. I got this from Ebscohost, so it’s definitely credible.
Gershoff, Elizabeth, and Robert Larzelere. "Is Corporal Punishment an Effective Means of Discipline?" American Psychological Association. American Psychological Association, 26 June 2002. Web. 04 Apr. 2016.
This article is based around research done on several different effects that corporal punishment has on children. Most of them are negatively perceived effects, and the only positive one had negative thoughts around it, because of the reasons behind it. I think it’s a pretty reliable source because it’s from a website called apa.org and it has some legitimate research basis.
Lee, M., and Maureen McMahon. "Counterpoint: Corporal Punishment Is Necessary For Discipline And Safety." Points Of View: Corporal Punishment (2016): 3. Points of View Reference Center. Web. 4 Apr. 2016.
This one talks about how teachers should be allowed to use some moderate disciplinary measures to control problem children. It also addresses the whole spanking argument and explains how the use of corporal punishment is the best way to keep kids in line and keeps violence, probably between students, out of school. This article is from the Points of View Database and is therefore pretty reliable and trustable.
Stokely, Anne. "Point: The Negative Impact Of Corporal Punishment." Points Of View: Corporal Punishment (2016): 5. Points of View Reference Center. Web. 1 Apr. 2016.
Talks more about negative repercussions of using physical punishment on children and how adults are abusing their power over those without control. It also states what should be happening to the adults who are hitting kids, like more training for teachers by professionals and psychologists and the use of anger management techniques by parents. The Points of View website has lots of articles that are peer reviewed and research based, which makes it pretty credible, I think.
Wilson, Brian. "Counterpoint: The Benefits Of Corporal Punishment." Points Of View: Corporal Punishment (2016): 6. Points of View Reference Center. Web. 1 Apr. 2016.
This article explains how the use of corporal punishment could potentially be beneficial, if used appropriately. It focuses more on the aspect of intimidation rather than the actual hitting of the child. But it does seem to be a credible source thanks to the Points of View Reference Center’s allowance to be on their website.