I had a teacher (Mr. Schuman - I'm sure the SOL has expired, LOL) who used to sometimes gently throw erasers. No anger involved - just an attention getter. I remember for some reason in my elementary school, in sixth grade, chess was a big thing. Two kids were playing chess during class with one of those little magnetic chess sets. The teacher saw them and leaned back and grabbed an eraser off the bottom of the chalk board and lobbed it, hitting the chess board square on and scattering the little chess pieces everywhere. The kids never played chess in class again!
Mr. Schuman was also known to smack kids on the rear with a pointer stick if they misbehaved. Times have certainly changed.
You betcha, friend.
Schools used paddles, back in my early years, to "discipline" all of us little urchins, too.
In elementary school, our principal, Mrs. Fletcher used Old Hickory. She'd walk around school twirling the damn thing like Officer O'Malley did his nightstick.
The very sight of Old Hickory made kids hearts flutter, and legend has it some would "soil themselves" at the mention of Old Hickory's name.
No one ever received more than six "tappings", as Mrs. Fletcher liked to characterize her form of discipline.
Yeah, those wooden pointers and their rubber tips along with those wooden yardsticks were employed to keep the peace, and restore order. The ritualistic aspect of the process also seemed to add to the level of fear before discipline was hammered out.
My high school principal, Mr. Goodknight, called his the "thunderwood".
I never pushed the envelope because my dad warned us, whatever you receive at school, you're going to get double when you get home. That's all the motivation my dumb, little ass needed to stay out of trouble.
Yes, I've seen erasers being thrown, as well as other things. One particularly sadistic wood shop teacher would frighten kids with sawing off their "bad hand". The threat alone would calm the most delinquent kid in the room.
However, as I often remind my wife, that was the 20th century, this is the 21st, and a whole different millennium.
Times change, rules, too.
People, they only seem to get worse.