Exploring sarcasm as a replacement for corporal punishment in public schools in South Africa

Published Articles === The dawn of a democratic South Africa in 1994 established a society entrenched in Human Rights milieu. As such, public schools are meant to align their policies with the rule of the law. Particularly, section 10 (1) of South African Schools Act, 84 1996 (hereafter SASA) respec...

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Main Author: Segalo, L
Other Authors: Central University of Technology Free State Bloemfontein
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Interim : Interdisciplinary Journal, Vol 13, Issue 4: Central University of Technology Free State Bloemfontein 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11462/320
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-cut-oai-ir.cut.ac.za-11462-3202016-03-16T03:59:04Z Exploring sarcasm as a replacement for corporal punishment in public schools in South Africa Segalo, L Central University of Technology Free State Bloemfontein sarcasm corporal punishment Human Rights South African Schools Act critical emancipatory research textual oriented discourse analyses Published Articles The dawn of a democratic South Africa in 1994 established a society entrenched in Human Rights milieu. As such, public schools are meant to align their policies with the rule of the law. Particularly, section 10 (1) of South African Schools Act, 84 1996 (hereafter SASA) respectfully prohibits the administration of corporal punishment directed at a learner in public schools. The subsequent section 10 (2) of SASA admonishes that any person contravening section 10 (1) of SASA is liable on conviction to a sentence which could be imposed for assault. These mentioned provisions of the school legislation are consistent with section 10 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa (RSA) which affords every person the inherent right to dignity of the person. Against the afore-mentioned legislative provisions, teachers have resorted to the use of sarcasm as a tool to inflict punishment in the manner that it could be equated with corporal punishment. Sarcasm is a form of language that is used to cause emotional and psychological harm, belittle, ridicule and humiliate the person it directed at. Judged against the provisions of the legislation governing schools in South African public schools, sarcasm could be said to be a direct violation of fundamental rights of learners to dignity of the person. In order to explore the intonation of sarcasm as supplement for corporal punishment the research paper employed a qualitative critical emancipatory research (CER) approach. Data gathered through a purposive sample of ten secondary teachers was analysed by the use of textual oriented discourse analyses. 2015-08-27T07:29:45Z 2015-08-27T07:29:45Z 2013 2013 Article 1684498X http://hdl.handle.net/11462/320 en_US Interim : Interdisciplinary Journal;Vol 12, Issue 4 Central University of Technology Free State Bloemfontein 79 132 bytes, 1 file Application/PDF Interim : Interdisciplinary Journal, Vol 13, Issue 4: Central University of Technology Free State Bloemfontein
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic sarcasm
corporal punishment
Human Rights
South African Schools Act
critical emancipatory research
textual oriented discourse analyses
spellingShingle sarcasm
corporal punishment
Human Rights
South African Schools Act
critical emancipatory research
textual oriented discourse analyses
Segalo, L
Exploring sarcasm as a replacement for corporal punishment in public schools in South Africa
description Published Articles === The dawn of a democratic South Africa in 1994 established a society entrenched in Human Rights milieu. As such, public schools are meant to align their policies with the rule of the law. Particularly, section 10 (1) of South African Schools Act, 84 1996 (hereafter SASA) respectfully prohibits the administration of corporal punishment directed at a learner in public schools. The subsequent section 10 (2) of SASA admonishes that any person contravening section 10 (1) of SASA is liable on conviction to a sentence which could be imposed for assault. These mentioned provisions of the school legislation are consistent with section 10 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa (RSA) which affords every person the inherent right to dignity of the person. Against the afore-mentioned legislative provisions, teachers have resorted to the use of sarcasm as a tool to inflict punishment in the manner that it could be equated with corporal punishment. Sarcasm is a form of language that is used to cause emotional and psychological harm, belittle, ridicule and humiliate the person it directed at. Judged against the provisions of the legislation governing schools in South African public schools, sarcasm could be said to be a direct violation of fundamental rights of learners to dignity of the person. In order to explore the intonation of sarcasm as supplement for corporal punishment the research paper employed a qualitative critical emancipatory research (CER) approach. Data gathered through a purposive sample of ten secondary teachers was analysed by the use of textual oriented discourse analyses.
author2 Central University of Technology Free State Bloemfontein
author_facet Central University of Technology Free State Bloemfontein
Segalo, L
author Segalo, L
author_sort Segalo, L
title Exploring sarcasm as a replacement for corporal punishment in public schools in South Africa
title_short Exploring sarcasm as a replacement for corporal punishment in public schools in South Africa
title_full Exploring sarcasm as a replacement for corporal punishment in public schools in South Africa
title_fullStr Exploring sarcasm as a replacement for corporal punishment in public schools in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Exploring sarcasm as a replacement for corporal punishment in public schools in South Africa
title_sort exploring sarcasm as a replacement for corporal punishment in public schools in south africa
publisher Interim : Interdisciplinary Journal, Vol 13, Issue 4: Central University of Technology Free State Bloemfontein
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11462/320
work_keys_str_mv AT segalol exploringsarcasmasareplacementforcorporalpunishmentinpublicschoolsinsouthafrica
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