Education Minister Peter Collier has revealed that one small school in Perth is using corporal punishment against students, which is still allowed in a loophole in the legislation.
The Western Australian government is now seeking to change the legislation to ban the cane and other physical discipline methods at all schools in the state.
Caning was banned in WA public schools but did not include private schools.
Mr Collier told Radio 6PR that there is only one school left in the state that has continued with corporal punishment.
"No public schools can use corporal punishment and they haven't been able to since the Education Act of 1999 but even before that in the 1980s public schools weren't using the cane,” he said.
“There's a raft of other areas that you can use to discipline a child which are much more effective in terms of the long term benefits for that child.”
It’s believed corporal punishment in WA had recently received attention after the Royal Commission into Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.
Nollamara Christian Academy’s Pastor Roger Monasmith said the school uses a small paddle “like a ping-pong bat” as a form of discipline.
Pastor Monasmith told PerthNow in 2011 that corporal punishment was never used in anger and the students would have disobeyed school rules and God by fighting, swearing, being disrespectful to teachers or failing to complete their work for several days in a row.
"We always give them a warning before we use it and we'll give them one swat (on the behind) and then the next time if they do the same thing, they get two swats," he said.
"We try to help these kids as much as we can because there are two things that are very important for kids to learn responsibility and accountability."
Every parent is asked to sign an agreement about corporal punishment before they enrol their child.
"It sounds like a dictatorship, but it's not. If you don't sign the agreement to give them the cane, then we cannot let them come in,” he said.
Mr Collier told The West Australian that there had been reluctance to interfere in the punishments schools thought were appropriate; however corporal punishment has fallen out of favour with many parents.
"This shows the overwhelming majority of parents don't want it," Mr Collier said.
"WA has moved on from this form of discipline and the time has come for physical punishment in schools to end."
Most states across Australia have prohibited the use of corporal punishment with Queensland the only state that has not explicitly prohibited or condoned the use of corporal punishment in education and care services.
9NEWS was unable to reach Nollamara Christian Academy for comment due to the school holidays.