You sound like a psychopath, and for a teacher your spelling and grammar is shocking!I still have my cane, it has red taped end I used to tell the boys it was so the blood would not show. It has a name 'whistling rufus' I could walk into a classroom making a swishing sound with it and say "Whistling Rufus is feeling well today boys"
I seldom ever used it and usualy only for breaches of safety rules in the engineering workshop. I would never cane a delinquent boy as it would not help him or me. A short sharp punishment seemed to do no harm to a mentaly healthy lad and got the crime paid for in short order, no time wasting detentions or lines. Sometimes a child would ask for the cane instead of a detention to get it over with. I never complied.
During teacher training I was put to observe a woodwork teacher at Pasadena Intermediate school. When he wanted a class situation to do a demonstration he would say "Form a class last one up gets the strap"
The rush to the front was spectacular to watch but dangerous. I expected to see the kids going over top of the benches.
I never had any trouble with class control I treated each person with respect and got it in return. I was in country schools and knew the Pakeha pupils parents and, most importantly the Maori kids grandmothers, and their blood lines so I could show nesessary respect to the tribal chiefs children. I knew that no Maori would show up a chiefs child so they had to be educated before any of the others would learn anything. Most of the Maori offenders today did not have the benifit of their grandmothers guidance (their parents shifted to work in the city and had no idea of how grandmothers bought up children) nor do they relate to or know about their tribal values.
I seem to be rambling - better get to bed - a Big Bikes ride in Hamilton tomorrow afternoon.![]()
Bookmarks