Children hit by parents more likely to bully others, research finds
A University College London (UCL) study found that children in England who experienced physical punishment at ages three, five, and seven were significantly less likely to pass GCSE exams, even after accounting for family background. The research, utilizing data from 19,000 UK children, also revealed that teenagers subjected to early childhood physical punishment were more prone to bullying siblings and others, including cyberbullying.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA University College London (UCL) study found that children in England who experienced physical punishment at ages three, five, and seven were significantly less likely to pass GCSE exams, even after accounting for family background. The research, utilizing data from 19,000 UK children, also revealed that teenagers subjected to early childhood physical punishment were more prone to bullying siblings and others, including cyberbullying. These findings have prompted renewed calls from experts and charities for a ban on smacking in England and Northern Ireland, similar to laws in Scotland and Wales. While the Department for Education stated new legislation will offer greater protection to vulnerable children, they have no immediate plans to ban smacking. The study concluded that physical punishment may negatively impact society as a whole.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe government has no plans to legislate at this stage for a smacking ban.
Children in England and Northern Ireland should be afforded the same protection from assault as adults, banning smacking.
Physical punishment does not improve children's behavior and has an adverse impact on their wellbeing and links to poorer outcomes.
Teenagers experiencing physical punishment in early childhood are markedly more likely to bully siblings, others, or engage in cyberbullying.
Children physically punished are significantly less likely to pass GCSE exams, even after accounting for background factors.