Instigator / Pro
2
1604
rating
6
debates
100.0%
won
Topic
#2979

Reasonable corporal punishment should be permitted in American public schools.

Status
Finished

The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.

Winner & statistics
Winner
2
1

After 3 votes and with 1 point ahead, the winner is...

coal
Parameters
Publication date
Last updated date
Type
Standard
Number of rounds
3
Time for argument
One week
Max argument characters
10,000
Voting period
One month
Point system
Winner selection
Voting system
Open
Contender / Con
1
1502
rating
8
debates
37.5%
won
Description

Four Key Points for Judges and potential contenders:

1. Reasonable corporal punishment includes, but is not necessarily limited to, physical conditioning (e.g., running laps around a track), spanking/paddling and the like. (1). The only corporal punishment at issue is "reasonable" corporal punishment. Any abusive corporal punishment would be, by definition, unreasonable. Thus, abusive corporal punishment (e.g., depriving a student of access to water while making him or her run laps in 115 degree Texas heat, beating with a baseball bat, thrashing with an electrical cord) is outside the scope of this debate. Corporal punishment permitted by law in those states permitting it is presumptively reasonable. (1).

2. The legality of corporal punishment is a different issue than reasonableness, however. This is about the normative question of whether corporal punishment should be allowed, not whether it is allowed in any type or form. Arguments with respect to the legal status of corporal punishment shall be considered non-topical and disregarded by judges.

3. The debate is limited to use of corporal punishment in the school setting, and the specific school setting at issue is American public schools. Other contexts beyond the school setting (e.g., corporal punishment at home), in non-American settings (e.g., Australia or Sweden) or in non-public contexts (private and/or religious schools) may be relevant as illustrative examples. But this is a debate about the United States (as opposed countries where corporal punishment is routinely carried out in unreasonable ways according to American sensibilities, like Malaysia, Uganda, Thailand, India or South Korea).

4. The debate is only about whether reasonable corporal punishment should be "permitted," as opposed to mandatory. Permitting corporal punishment does not imply that it will be used wholly or totally in place of other available measures of discipline (like in-school suspension, detention or revocation of extra curricular privileges).
Further, PRO does not have to come up with a plan for HOW corporal punishment should be applied or provide evidence that any particular scheme of implementing would avoid harms (such as potential abuses), identify what if any safeguards as to preventing abuse should be implemented, whether it should be a default punishment as opposed to something like in-school suspension, whether parents should be required to opt-in or opt-out or other issues focusing on implementation. Implementation-focused issues are beyond the scope of this resolution.

Source:

(1) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_corporal_punishment_in_the_United_States

Rules: Please review the rules carefully before accepting.

Structure. The structure of this debate shall follow as such:

Round 1: debaters shall make their affirmative cases (absent any specific refutation of arguments made by the opposing side).

Round 2: debaters shall rebut the affirmative cases raised in round 1 (and may introduce new evidence in support of such rebuttals).

Round 3: debaters shall reply to the rebuttals provided in round 2 and provide any reconstructive arguments in support of arguments initially raised in round 1 (but may not introduce new evidence in support of such replies or reconstructive arguments).

Burdens of Persuasion. The burdens of persuasion shall be equal, as stated below:

In order for PRO to win, PRO must argue that "on balance" reasonable corporal punishment should be permitted in American public schools; and prevent CON from establishing that, by the same standard, corporal punishment should NOT be permitted in American public schools.

In order for CON to win, CON must argue that "on balance" reasonable corporal punishment should NOT be permitted in American public schools; and prevent PRO from establishing that, by the same standard, corporal punishment SHOULD be permitted in American public schools.

For the avoidance of doubt, the burdens of persuasion apply equally to both sides. No side has any greater or lesser burden than the other. All starting points are equal.

Please ask questions if any of the above is unclear. If you do not agree to these terms, it would be better that you select another debate.

Accepting this debate implies that you agree with all terms above.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Winner
1 point(s)
Reason:

Definitely a good topic, without a clear right answer.

My gut reaction is that pro didn’t clearly affirm the resolution against the doubt cast by con… The description however is crystal clear on their competing burdens and effective resolutions. To which if I said pro only got 7 out of 10, that is still “on balance” more than the 6 out of 10 con got (these are not precise numbers, they’re just to showcase the general point).

Con ultimately gave too much ground in the wrong places, which left me not convinced his alternate proposal was mutually exclusive to the possibility of spanking (or something else physical but minor) when other methods fail; which was important to meeting his burden that such should not be permitted.

There’s a few points that really stood out to me:

I don’t want to say this is the crux of the debate, but it’s been nagging me... If Gershoff should be trusted or not. When a single researcher’s name gets drug through the mud preemptively, avoid their research when making a case to support the same conclusions as their research. This is important since the impact of anything from them is mitigated by the doubt, whereas any other researcher for the same topic does not suffer that.

Is change needed? Yes. Both sides agree. Ultimately students would be better off with more discipline. I really did not feel much doubt to the benefits pro offered, the challenge seemed to center on character assassinations of teachers and the possibility that there might be an even better way to attain the desired outcome.

Punishment gets into a couple dicey areas. It seems con considers things to only be punishment if the main point is the harm inflicted, which leaves a world of room for things if anything else is the main point and physical discomfort is collateral damage. I found the God assertions on it non-sequitur (waiting for God to handle it, doesn’t solve anything, it’s just wishful thinking and inaction… which might be how we got here). Pro was able to easily show that punishment is justifiable by multiple standards and backed by sources. If con’s proposal of a judicial committee is punishment or not was in dispute, but it sounds like public shame for the troublemakers, to deter the problematic actions; which sounds like a form of punishment with similar mental impacts to the shame of detention, loss of privileges, or even spanking. Con trying to argue schools are worse now because we punish more than when spankings were a thing, made it sound like spankings (even if suboptimal) is a step in the right direction.

Con did really well on rhetoric appeals. They are just not so moving to me, when they feel like flavorful but over the top assertions; instead of warranted arguments. Still, style points here.

more at:
https://www.debateart.com/debates/2979/comment-links/38099

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Winner
1 point(s)
Reason:

https://docs.google.com/document/d/17sRFmaSnWAgXD2ERPVvOMt36FH1FHvemwLSR-mMmkbI/edit

Lemme know if the link doesn’t work and I’ll add it to comments too.

Criterion
Pro
Tie
Con
Points
Winner
1 point(s)
Reason:

See comments. Con won by a landslide, even if his round 1 wasn't very impressive.