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Regulations under the Public Schools Act of 1866, adopted by the Council [of Education] 27 February 1867 regulated the punishment of children in schools by stipulating: “In the government of the pupils, all degrading and injurious punishments are to be avoided. The Teacher’s discipline must be mild but firm, his manner kindly, his demeanour cheerful and calculated to gain the confidence of his pupils, and his language marked by strict propriety. While he should overlook no offence, his aim should be to prevent the necessity for punishment by the improvement of the offender.”In relation to corporal punishment the regulations continue: “Corporal punishment should be inflicted in extreme cases only, and then as a last resource; and the teacher must keep a record of the time and place at which pupils were corporally chastised, the amount of such punishment and the nature of the offence.”
Uniform stationery soon evolved to enable compliance with these regulations. These punishment books are registers of all cases in which corporal punishment was administered to pupils. The information it details includes: the pupil’s name; age; nature of offence; amount of punishment (i.e. number of strokes); by whom sent; the date of the punishment; and by whom the punishment was inflicted.
The series from Limeburner’s Creek Public School is currently represented by its final volume, which covers the years from 1950 until the closure of the school in 1966. Only seventeen cases of corporal punishment are recorded during this period. The final entry in the volume, on the second page, is the annotation “No cases to date,” and is dated the day of the school’s closure, the 15th of December, 1966.
Created: 1877-11-01 to 1966-12-15
Data time period: 1950-11-09 to 1966-12-15
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