Meh... It was only for a few years. I was there at the cusp of when the times changed. Some old style but on it's way out. By time i made it to 4th grade that stuff was over with.
This post was edited by Benedict Arnold at November 17, 2017 11:36 PM MST
Yep, it was. Oddly enough I didn't really start to hate school with passion until a few years after that stuff was banned. It was the norm to us those years. You act up, you get cracked with a ruler or made to do a water bucket stand outside the door for 10 min.
Ruler was used quite liberally in our school too but aimed at boys, girls were always pinched painfully on the face...those who had chubby cheeks were pinched most violently! I dunno wat a water bucket stand means?
Rarely...if ever. In the rare instances that I did err, I was corrected and continued on with my assignment. The only time I was treated harshly, I went class without my shirt tucked in . The teacher warned me to tuck it in or he would throw me out and might not open the door.
I had one teacher, igrade seven, grab Me by back of hair and slam my head against my desk for talking too much in class... I still hate her gutz .. and I still talk too much ;)
I honestly don't think I ever told them... I was more embarressed than anything else. I think she felt bad afterwords... was just an awkward moment for everyone in the room. I never forgot it though.
Absolutely, I think she had just reached her end with me. Not that that makes it okay. Also I didn't have a great relationship with my mother, and had no relationship with my father at the time. I can't imagine any child would put up with that now, I hope not anyway.
I had one sadistic teacher when I was in second grade. She was an ugly old spinster that had no compassion for little kids. I remember her yelling at me for having tangled hair. I came from a place where no one got up in the morning to tend to such things. This witch made me sit in a chair in front of the class while she took a comb through it in an act of pure shaming.
Back then, you didn't tell your parents. You assumed your parents would be on their side.