Self Assessment Paradigms Structure Balance
ESE502
Getting StartedClassSyllabusCommunicateLibraryHelp!
ESE502 : The Class : Structure : Punishment

Punishment

Punishment and coercion are discipline techniques that decrease behaviors. How are they different?

Punishment, by definition, lessens a student's future behavior. In addition, it is deliberately chosen to be aversive or unpleasant -- that is, to be a deterrent. It also should immediately follow the behavior that is targeted for decrease. Unfortunately, it does not teach a better set of behaviors. In addition, it often sets up defensive reactions, power struggles, anger, humiliation, and can eventually result in the loss of relationship.

Consequences can be viewed as different than punishments, particularly if they are natural consequences rather than contrived situations meant to simulate cause and effect. For instance, touching a hot stove usually decreases reaching out to touch the stove. The natural consequence of being burned changes our approach to hot objects. If we get hurt riding on a skate board, we may not want to use one again. If we get a stomach ache from eating green fruit, we learn to modify our eating.

Dreikurs introduced a discipline technique called logical consequences. He believed it important to diminish the adult response of punishment for unwanted behaviors by giving children the sense that their actions resulted in the outcomes. Adults seek natural or logical extensions to behaviors and apply them to youth. This does not always work well. Sometimes the adult is too angry, the child refuses, or the response is too contrived. Once example is someone burning a child with a match, a logical next step that many people use to stop children from playing with matches. It is not really a logical extension, and is usually considered abusive and coercive.

Consequence Quiz

Directions: Read each of these and mark them as N for a natural consequence or L if it is a logical consequence (you know, contrived to fit). Feel free to place a P on any that are punishments.

  1. Bobby doesn't do his homework and gets an F.
  2. Mary picks up a cat and is admitted to the hospital with respiratory failure.
  3. Lucy steps on a rusty nail and gets a tetanus shot.
  4. Larry hits Muriel and she won't play with him any more.
  5. Terry runs a red light and gets a ticket.
  6. Linda makes her payment late and gets a $25.00 late charge added to her balance.
  7. Terry runs a yellow light and gets hit by a car.

  8. Brent sneaks into the pantry and eats lunch chips so he buys some with his allowance..
  9. John swings high and falls out of the swing, breaking his wrist.
  10. Jeff talks in class and loses recess.
  11. Perry makes paper airplanes during recess and doesn't get a turn swinging.
  12. Jennifer is last in line so she doesn't get into the cafeteria until school starts.
  13. Maria runs in the hall and skins her knee.
  14. Lekendra calls the teacher a "fat pig" and gets suspended.
  15. LaRee raises her hand but the teacher doesn't call on her.
  16. Teresa doesn't go to the bathroom during recess, so she wets her pants.
  17. Stella's dog follows her to school, so they call the humane society.
  18. Martin forgets his lunch, so his mother has to come to school with it.
  19. Ty says bad words on the playground so he has to write 20 good words from a book.
  20. Ray doesn't bring his pencil to class so he can't do his work.
Answers
1. L / P 5. L / P 9. N 13. N 17. L
2. N 6. L / P 10. L / P 14. L / P 18. L
3. L 7. N 11. N 15. N

19. L / P

4. N / L 8. L 12. N 16. N 20. N

Things to Ponder:

1 What is the difference between natural and logical consequences and punishment? do they ever overlap?

2. Is coercion ever called for? Does coercion make an action punishment?

3. When is corporal punishment appropriate?

4. Should we punish students by giving them more work?

5. Should we reward them by reducing work?

6. Is paddling a form of bullying -- Might makes right?

Go on to Management Plans
or
Go back to Readings

E-mail J'Anne Ellsworth at Janne.Ellsworth@nau.edu


NAU

Copyright 1998 Northern Arizona University
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED