Education Policy

Protecting Our Students in Schools Act

The Federal Government Must Act Now to End Corporal Punishment

Protecting Our Students in Schools Act square• By Morgan Craven, J.D.  • May 2025 • See announcement about POSSA’s reintroduction


The  Protecting Our Students in Schools Act is a federal bill to prohibit corporal punishment in schools across the country. It has several major components.

  • Prohibits schools that receive federal funding from hitting, paddling or using other forms of physical violence to discipline children.
  • Creates a private right of action so that families and students can bring civil lawsuits in state or federal court against school personnel, law enforcement officials and security personnel who violate the law and hit children in school.
  • Specifies the investigation and intervention powers of the U.S. Attorney General and the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights when responding to violations of the law.
  • Ensures families, state education agencies and local law enforcement entities are notified when a violation of the law occurs and a child is corporally punished in school.
  • Requires education agencies to ensure all schools are notified about the prohibition of corporal punishment and to report information to the U.S. Department of Education about school climate practices.
  • Creates a grant program for state and local education agencies to support evidence-based programs, like Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports, that reduce harmful discipline practices and build positive school climates.

Learn more about POSSA, read the language of the bill, and review the press release from House sponsors Suzanne Bonamici (D-OR), Lucy McBath (D-GA), Gwen Moore (D-WI), and Frederica Wilson (D-FL).


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We all share the goal of safe and supportive schools where all children can learn, explore and thrive. No young person should feel fear in their classrooms, especially the fear of violence at the hands of educators and administrators they should be able to trust. It is past time for us to end the practice of hitting children in schools.

Action: Please contact your members of Congress to encourage them to co-sponsor POSSA and the Senate version of the bill when it is reintroduced. 

Learn more about corporal punishment in schools with IDRA’s resources, including:

  • Key Facts: Support the Protecting our Students in Schools Act – Why the Federal Government Must Act Now to End Corporal Punishment
  • IDRA’s interactive map of corporal punishment in U.S. schools
  • Article: The Ever-Present History of Violence in U.S. Schools – How State-Sanctioned Cruelty Persists through School Corporal Punishment Policies

Federal Intervention is Critical

In the 2017-18 school year, nearly 70,000 students – some as young as preschool age – were paddled, spanked and hit in their schools (Craven, 2022). Black students and students with disabilities are disproportionately hit and punished, making ending corporal punishment and ensuring robust protections at the federal level a pressing civil rights issue (Craven, 2022).

About 20 states still allow corporal punishment in schools even though mountains of evidence show the practice harms children and school climates in a number of ways. Many of these states have banned corporal punishment in other settings – like juvenile detention centers, foster care facilities, jails and prisons – because of the harm hitting can cause to young people.

Despite the evidence of harm to children, many school districts and states are doubling down on their efforts to cling to outdated forms of violence over the well-being of children in schools.

For example, in 2023, Texas lawmakers voted down a bill that would prohibit corporal punishment in schools. Opponents of the bill emphasized they believed it was important for children to feel fear in schools and cited their religious beliefs to justify protecting a practice that child welfare, pediatric, mental health, educational and legal organizations have repeatedly opposed.* Shortly after the bill was defeated, Principal Jeffery Hogg in Texas’ Overton High School was arrested for hitting a child so hard she suffered injuries that a pediatrician confirmed were consistent with child abuse.


The Facts About Corporal Punishment

Corporal punishment has no pedagogical or instructional value and serves no safety purpose in schools. Physically hurting students has negative impacts on individual students and entire school climates. The unnecessary practice can also compromise the trusting relationships that are critical for school safety.

Corporal punishment hurts students’ academic outcomes. Research shows that corporal punishment in schools can limit the academic achievement and success of the students being punished and the students who see their peers punished (Dupper & Dingus, 2008; Hyman, 1996). Other analyses show negative impacts on cognitive functioning, lower performance on tests and lower grade point averages for students who are hit in their schools (MacKenzie, et al., 2012; American Psychological Association, 2021).

Corporal punishment hurts students physically. The stated purpose of corporal punishment is to physically hurt students and, sadly, this is the only thing the practice does. Students can experience significant physical injury when they are hit, spanked, slapped or paddled, including cuts, bruises and broken bones (Gershoff, et al., 2015).

Corporal punishment can harm students’ mental and emotional well-being. Students who are hit in front of their peers may experience trauma and low self-esteem (Greydanus, et al., 2003). They can be emotionally humiliated, feel unsafe and disempowered, and struggle with lifelong depression (Gershoff, 2017). Harsh physical punishment can also lead to other mental health and substance abuse disorders (Afifi, et al., 2017; Afifi, et al., 2012).

Corporal punishment is ineffective and even counterproductive as a discipline or teaching tool. Hitting children does not teach good behavior, it may do the opposite. Research shows that corporal punishment does not improve behaviors, may exacerbate behavioral challenges, and in some cases is used when students are exhibiting completely normal, age-appropriate behaviors (Gershoff, 2018). When schools rely on corporal punishment, they are proven research-based strategies that support students and promote safer school climates.

Corporal punishment teaches violence as a solution. Schools that model violence as a way to address conflict (real or perceived) grant permission for students to use violence, as young people and later as adults. This can compromise interpersonal relationships (Terk, 2010) and perpetuate a culture where physical violence, particularly against people of color and people with disabilities who are disproportionately hit in school, is seen as acceptable.

State-sanctioned violence cannot continue in schools and states. Federal lawmakers and agencies have a responsibility to protect all children from physical harm, and we call on policymakers to immediately:

  • Support and pass the Protecting Our Students in Schools Act, and
  • Enforce civil rights laws that are designed to ensure children of color and students with disabilities are not disproportionately targeted and harmed in their schools.

IDRA urges school districts and states to adopt policies and practices that center the well-being and safety of students.


Endorsers of the Protecting Our Students in Schools Act

Advocating 4 Kids, Inc.

All4Ed

American Atheists

American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)

American Humanist Association

American Psychological Association

American Psychological Association,

American School Counselor Association

American Youth Policy Forum

Autistic Self Advocacy Network

Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law

Center for Learner Equity

Center for Popular Democracy

Children’s Defense Fund

Committee for Children

Council for Exceptional Children

Council of Administrators of Special Education

Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates

Dignity in Schools Campaign

Disability Law Colorado

Education Reform Now

EduColor

Elite Educational Consulting

Every Texan

Fannie Education Alliance

First Focus Campaign for Children, Girls Inc.

GLSEN

Gwinnett SToPP

Human Rights Campaign

Ibero American Action League, Inc.

Intercultural Development Research Association (IDRA)

KIPP Foundation

Lives in the Balance

Mississippi Coalition to End Corporal Punishment

NAACP

National Association of Councils on Developmental Disabilities

National Association of Secondary School Principals

National Association of Social Workers

National Black Child Development Institute (NBCDI)

National Center for Learning Disabilities

National Disability Rights Network (NDRN)

National Down Syndrome Congress

National Education Association, American Federation of Teachers

National Parents Union

National PTA

National Urban League

National Women’s Law Center

New Leaders

Nollie Jenkins Family Center, Inc.

Open Society Policy Center

Parent Education Organizing Council

Racial Justice NOW

S.T.A.N.D. Up

Texas Appleseed

Texas Kids Can’t Wait

The Advocacy Institute

The Arc of the United States

The Education Trust

The Federal School Discipline and Climate Coalition (FedSDC)

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

TNTP

United Women in Faith

Uplift MN

Volunteer State Seal of Biliteracy


Resources

Afifi, et al. (2017). Spanking and adult mental health impairment: The case for the designation of spanking as an adverse childhood experience. Child Abuse Negl. 71:24-31

Afifi, T.O., Mota, N.P., Dasiewicz, P., MacMillan, H.L., Jitender, S. (2012). Physical punishment and mental disorders: results from a nationally representative US sample. Pediatrics, 130(2), 184-92.

American Psychological Association. (2021). Corporal Punishment Does Not Belong in Schools. citing Gershoff, E.T., Sattler, K.M.P., & Holden, G.W. (2019). School Corporal Punishment and Its Associations with Achievement and Adjustment. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 63, 1-8.

Craven, M. (2022). Serving All Students – Promoting a Healthier, More Supportive School Environment. Written Testimony Presented to the U.S. House Committee on Education and Labor Early Childhood, Elementary, and Secondary Education Subcommittee.

Dupper, D.R., & Dingus, A.E.M. (2008). Corporal Punishment in U.S. Public Schools: A Continuing Challenge for School Social Workers. National Association of Social Workers, 243-250.

Hyman, I. (1996). Using Research to Change Public Policy: Reflections on 20 Years of Effort to Eliminate Corporal Punishments in Schools. Pediatrics, 98(4), 818-821.

Greydanus, D.E., Pratt, H.D., Spates, C.R., Blake-Dreher, A.E., Greydanus-Gearhart, M.A., & Patel, D.R. (2003). Corporal Punishment in Schools. Journal of Adolescent Health, 32, 385-393.

Gershoff, E.T., Goodman, G.S., Miller-Perrin, C., Holden, G.W., Jackson, Y., & Kazdin, A. (2018). The Strength of the Evidence Against Physical Punishment of Children and Its Implications for Parents, Psychologists, and Policymakers. American Psychologist, 73, 626-638. doi: 10.1037/ amp0000327

Gershoff, E. (2017). School Corporal Punishment in Global Perspective: Prevalence, Outcomes, and Efforts at Intervention. Psychology, Health & Medicine, 22(51), 224-239.

Gershoff, E.T., Purtell, K.M., & Holas, I. (2015). Corporal Punishment in U.S. Public Schools: Legal Precedents, Current Practices, and Future Policy. Advances in Child and Family Policy and Practice (pp. 1-105). doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-14818-2

MacKenzie, M.J., Nicklas, E., Waldfogel, J., & Brooks-Gunn, J. (2012). Corporal Punishment and Child Behavioral and Cognitive Outcomes through 5 Years-of-age: Evidence from a Contemporary Urban Birth Cohort Study. Infant and Child Development, 21(1): 3-33.

Terk, J. (July 7, 2010). Corporal Punishment Archives.

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