Corporal Punishment at School in South Africa Is Illegal
Corporal punishment in all South African schools is prohibited by law. Any teacher who physically punishes a learner has committed assault and can be reported to the principal, DoE, and SAPS.
FreeSouth African Law2 related guides
Direct Answer
Section 10 of the South African Schools Act absolutely prohibits corporal punishment in all South African schools — public and private. A teacher who physically punishes a learner commits assault, which is a criminal offence. Report it to the school principal, the District Education Office, and the South African Police Service.
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“No person may administer corporal punishment at a school to a learner. Any person who contravenes this provision is guilty of an offence.”
Constitution of South Africa
Section 12
“Everyone has the right to freedom and security of the person, which includes the right not to be treated or punished in a cruel, inhuman or degrading way.”
Children's Act 38 of 2005
Section 141
“No child in alternative care may be subjected to corporal punishment or any other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.”
What to Do
Step-by-Step Guide
1Document the incident immediately — date, time, teacher's name, what happened, witnesses, and any injuries. Photograph injuries.
2Report to the school principal in writing. The principal has a legal obligation to act.
3Report to the District Education Office (Circuit Manager) in writing if the principal does not act or is the offender.
4Open a criminal case of assault at the nearest police station. Corporal punishment is assault — it does not matter that it happened at school.
5Report to the South African Council for Educators (SACE) — the teacher can lose their professional registration.
What to Say
Exact Words to Use
“"Corporal punishment is absolutely prohibited by Section 10 of the South African Schools Act. What happened to my child constitutes criminal assault. I am reporting this to the District Education Office, the SAPS, and the South African Council for Educators today."”
Tone: In writing to the principal/DoE
Now practise saying it. The Advocate has a scenario that walks you through exactly this situation — phrase by phrase, with audio playback and a practice drill. Free to try.
Consent is irrelevant — Section 10 is an absolute prohibition with no exceptions. There is no consent that can make corporal punishment lawful in a South African school, regardless of culture, religion, or disciplinary philosophy.
Does this apply to private and religious schools?
Yes. The Constitutional Court in Christian Education South Africa v Minister of Education confirmed that the prohibition applies to all schools, including private and religious schools. No religious or cultural argument can override the statutory ban.
Get Help Now
Resources & Helplines
SACE
012 663 9517
Report the teacher for disciplinary action and potential deregistration.
Knowing the law is step one. The Advocate has scenarios on Children's — practise the exact words to use, with audio, law references, and Scripture. Free to start.