Student Refuses To Pick Up Litter : Big Uproar in Barbados.
The Caribbean Is One Nation.
Submitted by William Skinner
The public debate, in Barbados, surrounding the refusal of a
student to pick up paper, on the instruction of a teacher, is instructive of
the changing norms the society is having in several areas. The days of the
teacher being always right are no longer with us. We must come to terms with
the simple fact that children do have rights and these rights include asking
why they are being punished or being asked to do any particular task. We should
be careful not to come down too hard on the teacher but bear in mind that in
this case the child probably saw the request as punishment for something that
she was not a party to. It is a fine line, in this case, between request and
punishment.
Of course there are those who will present many cases of
teachers punishing children back in the “good old days”. They are suffering
from severe nostalgia, hoping in vain for a Barbados that no longer exists.
Hence, well intentioned citizens , such as Mr. Carl Moore, do not stand a
chance of convincing others, such as retired principal Mr. Matthew Farley, that
corporal punishment, sends a message to impressionable young minds that
violence is the only antidote to conflict.
In this case, the teacher probably over reached by actually
denying the child the rights to class room instruction by making her just wait
outside the counselor’s door, if press reports are accurate. This matter should
have been more delicately handled once the child had refused to execute the
order. Since the child had not created the infraction by littering the
premises, she responded as many young adults do these days; defending what they
now understand as their rights. Rights to which the Barbados government is a
signatory. We must learn to accept that modern children will be “seen and heard”
and are not like those from the good old days, who were sometimes brutalized
for acts they did not commit. It was so bad that they were afraid to even
discuss the beatings with their parents for fear of being beaten again. In
today’s world such acts are known as violence against children and in more
developed societies, will land the teacher and parent in prison!
I can recall quite vividly being beaten with the “whole class” for acts I
did not commit. Like Carl Moore, I am convinced that beating children and using
corporal punishment is barbaric. This nonsense about “Peter paying for Paul and
Paul paying for all” has no place in a democratic society.
I am therefore in sympathy with both the child and the
teacher. Teachers are usually unfairly castigated for all that is wrong with
society and young people are also being unfairly blamed for the falling values. Both
groups must therefore work harder to resolve conflict. In this case, the child
did nothing wrong by refusing to accept what she perhaps interpreted as an
unjust punishment. It could have been the result of the approach used or
circumstances of which the public is totally unaware.
1/29/16
William Skinner is a social commentator.
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