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The Three Habits of Highly Effective Teachers

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Title: The Three Habits of Highly Effective Teachers


1
The Three Habits of Highly Effective Teachers
  • Rodney H. Clarken
  • School of Education
  • Northern Michigan University
  • Presented at the 18th Annual National
    Youth-At-Risk Conference, Savannah, GA
  • March 4-7, 2007

2
What is a habit?
  • habit (n) 1. something done all the time an
    action or behavior pattern that is regular,
    repetitive, and often unconscious.

3
What is effective?
  • effective (adj) causing a result, especially
    the desired or intended result

4
What is a teacher?
  • teacher (n) 1. somebody who teaches.
  • teech (v) 1. impart knowledge or skill.
  • (all from Encarta Dictionary)

5
In other words, this program will describe three
things which if regularly done by somebody who
imparts knowledge and skills will be more likely
to cause the desired result developing our
students potential.

6
How can we know what is effective?
  • 5 ways of knowing/determining truth
  • Senses and experience
  • Reason, logic and empiricism
  • Tradition and tested wisdom
  • Inspiration, intuition
  • God tells us
  • Others?

7
All these ways are fallible.
  1. Senses (illusions, mirages) and experience
    (biased)
  2. Reason, logic and empiricism (scientist and
    scholars disagree, new findings replace old)
  3. Tradition and tested wisdom (varies)
  4. Inspiration, intuition (differs)
  5. God (may be infallible, but our understandings
    and interpretations are not)

8
The best we can do is to
  • use as many of the ways of knowing truth as
    possible. The more ways we can verify truth, the
    more we can rely on it.
  • openly and independently investigate truth, freed
    from bias, superstition and limitation.

9
In this presentation,
  • I have tried to combine ideas from 1) experience,
    2) scholarship, 3) traditional wisdom, 4)
    intuition, and 5) sacred scriptures to identify
    and synthesize the principles that I feel are the
    most fundamental in being an effective teacher.

10
1. My senses and experience
  • As all experience is biased, it is only fair you
    know some of mine
  • Grew up poor on an Iowa tenant farm
  • Attended six different colleges in five states
    and have five degrees in liberal arts, education,
    psychology and administration
  • Traveled to 60 countries and lived in Africa,
    Asia, Caribbean, Europe and several US states
  • 30 plus years in education at elementary,
    secondary and post secondary levels in rural,
    urban, reservation and international areas

11
2. Scholarship
  • Effective teaching has an extensive literature in
    education, psychology and management.
  • For example, an emerging field of psychology,
    Positive Psychology, draws on science, philosophy
    and religion to identify positive emotions, six
    core virtues, twenty-four signature strengths and
    ways of using the signature strengths in relation
    to work, love, and parenting. (www.authentichappin
    ess.org)

12
Stephen Coveys 7 Habits of Highly Effective
People
  • Dependence
  • Habit 1 Be Proactive Principles of Personal
    Vision
  • Habit 2 Begin with the End in Mind Principles of
    Personal Leadership
  • Habit 3 Put First Things First Principles of
    Personal Management
  • Independence

13
  • Habit 4 Think Win/Win Principles of
    Interpersonal Leadership
  • Habit 5 Seek First to Understand, Then to be
    Understood Principles of Empathic Communication
  • Habit 6 Synergize Principles of Creative
    Cooperation and Communication
  • Interdependence
  • Habit 7 Sharpen the Saw Principles of Balanced
    Self-Renewal
  • The 8th Habit (2004) is to "Find your voice and
    inspire others to find theirs".

14
3. Traditional wisdom
  • virtue and happiness were intimately related
    for Socrates and Plato with wisdom a necessary
    and sufficient condition for behaving well and
    being happy." (Parducci 10)
  • Aristotle the full realization of human
    potential results from two kinds of habits
  • mental activity, such as knowledge, which lead to
    the highest human activity, contemplation
  • practical action (moral virtues conforming to the
    golden mean) and emotion, such as courage.
    (Nicomachean Ethics)

15
Anishinaabe Seven Grandfathers
  1. Bravery
  2. Honesty
  3. Truth
  4. Respect
  5. Wisdom
  6. Love
  7. Humility

16
4. Inspiration/Intuition
  • Combining what I have learned from other sources
    and meditating on what was the best way to serve
    teachers so that they might better be able to
    serve their students, I developed the model that
    I will share with you in this presentation. It
    has come over many years in bit and pieces, in
    part through inspiration and intuition, the
    result of much deliberate effort.

17
5. Sacred scriptures
  • As part of my orientation as a Baha'i, I believe
    in the sacred nature of all the revealed
    religions. Therefore, I have read extensively
    from the holy books of the worlds religions to
    find and understand the truths that are contained
    therein. I have looked for similarities and
    commonalities in teachings.

18
The Golden Rule From Bahai, Buddhist Christian,
Hindu, Islamic, Jewish Zoroastrian Scriptures
  • Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would
    find hurtful.
  • Do unto others as you would have them do unto
    you.
  • Blessed is he who preferreth his brother before
    himself.
  • Do not to others what ye do not wish done to
    yourself and wish for others too what ye desire
    and long for yourself.
  • Love thy neighbor as thyself.
  • What is hateful to you, do not to your fellow
    man.
  • Only that nature is good when it shall not do
    unto another whatever is not good for its own
    self
  • No one of you is a believer until he desires for
    his brother that which he desires for himself.
  • Choose thou for thy neighbor that which thou
    choosest for thyself.

19
What then are the three habits of highly
effective teachers?
20
(No Transcript)
21
They combine the highest virtues of each of the
three essential aspects of a human being mind,
heart and body
  1. Truth-mind
  2. Love-heart
  3. Justice-body

22
Habits of the mind Truth
  • trooth n.  
  • Conformity to fact or actuality.
  • A statement proven to be or accepted as true.
  • Sincerity integrity.
  • Fidelity to an original or standard.
  • Reality actuality.
  • often Truth That which is considered to be the
    supreme reality and to have the ultimate meaning
    and value of existence.
  • American Heritage Dictionary

23
Truth Scholarship and Scripture
  • The scientific method is a powerful tool for
    ascertaining truth and advancing civilization.
  • "Veracity (adherence to the truth) is the heart
    of morality" (Thomas H. Huxley).
  • Truthfulness is the foundation of all human
    virtues (Abdul-Baha).
  • "I am the way, and the truth" (John 146).
    (Comparable statements can be found in other
    scriptures)

24
Truth and knowing
  • What we know and believe to be true can be
    weighed against our experience, traditions and
    intuition. In addition, scientific and religious
    truths should be considered religion to check
    materialistic scientism and science to check
    religious superstitions, dogmas and fanaticism.

25
Developing the habit of truth
  • Judge using the five ways of knowing truth.
  • Be truthful to ourselves, which enables us to
    know thyself and to thine ownself be true.
  • Practice understanding and communicating reality
    as it really is, rather than as how we imagine or
    fancy it to be.
  • Investigate truth with an open mind and consult
    with others.
  • Insist on truth in your community and
    institutions.

26
Habits of the heart Love
  • luv (v)
  • an intense feeling of deep affection (Oxford)
  • Acting intentionally, in sympathetic response to
    others (including God), to promote overall
    well-being. (Thomas Jay Oord).

27
Love Scholarship and Scripture
  • "Love conquers all" (Virgil).
  • Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy,
    it does not boast, it is not proud. It is not
    rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily
    angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does
    not delight in evil but rejoices with the truth.
    It always protects, always trusts, always hopes,
    always perseveres. Love never fails. (1
    Corinthians 134-8)

28
Love and emotion
  • Emotions are expressions of our loving capacity,
    and affect motivation. We feel
  • Happy when loved things are near, well-treated,
    pleased.
  • Sad when loved things removed, hurt, grieved.
  • Angry when loved things mistreated, threatened,
    wronged.
  • Fearful when loved things insecure, at-risk.
  • Disgusted when loved things violated, offended,
    made repulsive.
  • Understanding these forces of love can help us to
    regulate and direct their influence in ways that
    are beneficial to ourselves and others.

29
Developing the habit of love.
  • We should first love ourselves, which give us the
    love needed to love others.
  • Considered the most fundamental element in all of
    the worlds religions.
  • Love gives us energy, directs our actions and
    leads to unity.
  • On the highest level, love is the attraction to
    good, beauty and truth.

30
Habits of body Justice
  • justice (n)
  • fairness or reasonableness, especially in the way
    people are treated or decisions are made
    (Encarta)
  • the quality of being just righteousness,
    equitableness, or moral rightness (Dictionary.com)

31
Justice Scholarship and Scripture
  • "Justice is the first virtue of social
    institutions, as truth is of systems of thought
    (John Rawls).
  • It is always better to be just than unjust
    (summary of Plato's Republic)
  • Be fair to yourselves and to others
    (Bahaullah).

32
Developing the habit of justice
  • Be just to yourself.
  • Combine love and truth with justice.
  • Practice in small ways using justice in your
    classroom.
  • Demand justice in all your affairs.
  • Justice requires bravery and courage.
  • Day by day, little by little, one step at a time.

33
Consult with your neighbor
  • On how you can use or develop the habits of
    truth, love and justice in your lives and your
    classrooms?
  • Take one student or one case that you are
    concerned about and share. Apply the habits to
    the case. How would it look. Would it work?

34
In dealing with your situation ask yourself the
following 3 questions
  1. Is it or am I being truthful?
  2. Is it or am I being loving?
  3. Is it or am I being just or fair?

35
Part 2
  • If we have time and you are still interested.

36
How can we learn more about truth, love and
justice?
  • Read the worlds great philosophical and
    spiritual traditions for more insights and
    principles.
  • Study the sciences to better understand their
    social, psychological, physiological and
    neurological connections and effects.
  • Apply these habits in your life and use the
    complementary ways of knowing as checks and
    balances.
  • Consult with others in an open manner using the
    Seven Grandfathers.

37
Education is a process
  • of the development of our capacities for truth,
    love and justice.
  • Developing these capacities is a lifelong
    endeavor the more we have of them the more we
    want them, as they bring increased happiness and
    fulfillment.

38
The 3 habits from different angles
Truth Love Justice Think Feel Act Head
Heart Hand Mind Heart Body Logic/Epistem
ology Ethics/Aesthetics Metaphysics Truth Beau
ty Good Cognitive Affective
Conative Reason Compassion Courage
39
Truth, love and justice together
  • When all three habits work positively in harmony,
    the individual and society grow, develop and
    advance.
  • When a positive habit is matched with a negative
    habit, trouble results.
  • For example, those who love ()
    untruth/dishonesty (-), hate (-) truth/honesty
    (), or do not know (-) how to love (), or do
    not love to know, a problem of growth is
    created.

40
TLJ the formula version
  • T x L x J V Truth (T) times Love (L) times
    Justice (J) equals Value (V)
  • T x L x J V
  • -T x L x J -V
  • -T x L x J V
  • A zero in any capacity zero value
  • 3T x 2L x 0(J) 0
  • Mathematical properties
  • Increased quantity in any variableincreased value

41
TLJ are contextual and developmental
  • Partly depends on environment, culture,
    interrelationships and level of development.
  • Are influenced by our paradigms, emotional
    states, beliefs, interests, goals and established
    habits of mind, heart and body.
  • The more we exert and practice TLJ, the more we
    will develop them.

42
Learning TLJ
  • is key to promoting human happiness and
    well-being.
  • is part of developing our higher nature, which
    must overcome our lower natures.
  • will enable us to develop our individual
    potential.
  • takes effort.

43
Setting Goals for TLJ
  • The more we are attracted to, understand and are
    able and willing to work for TLJ, the more likely
    we are to achieve them.
  • Educators can assist learners develop TLJ through
    developing high resolve, sense of purpose,
    self-esteem, sense of personal capability and an
    internal locus of control.
  • TLJ give meaning to life. They direct energy
    towards healthy values.

44
Help students
  • develop their own TLJ in more complex, expanded
    and unique situations.
  • use consultation, reasoning, independent
    investigation of truth, meditation, parables,
    stories, metaphors, prayer and reflection to help
    develop TLJ.
  • unite body (hand), mind (head) and heart to work
    together.

45
  • TLJ involve the knowing, wanting and creating
    conditions within the self and in interaction
    with the environment.
  • The educators' modeling and use of TLJ affect the
    classroom environment and learning.
  • Change in each capacity changes the context and
    effects the learning and becoming process.

46
Motivation
  • Extrinsic motivators, though needed and useful,
    are limited, and can actually hinder motivation,
    especially if one is intrinsically motivated.
  • Encourage autonomy and authenticity in TLJ.
  • Self-actualization occurs when all three
    capacities are fully and actively engaged.

47
Social influences
  • It is primarily in social groups that TLJ are
    exercised and developed.
  • Positive relationships are
  • Loving courteous, caring, compassionate,
    creative,
  • Truthful consultative, open-minded
  • Just complementary, chaste, constructive,
    collaborative and cooperative.
  • Positive social environments are
  • safe, secure, service-oriented, fair, united,
    peaceful, joyous, respectful and refined.

48
Individual differences.
  • Each person has unique strategies, endowments,
    powers, responsibilities, talents, interests and
    capabilities based on innate, inherited and
    acquired characteristics for which they are
    ultimately responsible to develop.
  • Help students know, love and actualize their
    their unique capacities using TLJ.
  • We have all been created noble. Do not abase
    anyone, let others abase anyone or let them abase
    themselves.

49
  • Educators are responsible to diagnose and
    prescribe what is needed for each student unique
    endowments, experiences and heredity to encourage
    optimal development as best they can.
  • Each person is a mine filled with precious gems
    and minerals. Education can help each each person
    find his/her unique value and contribution to the
    world.
  • Unity in diversity is vital in all aspects of
    education.

50
Standards and assessment.
  • Justice and equity are key in standards and
    assessment. The evaluation of all things depends
    upon them.
  • Students show the results of their learning
    through their lives, deeds and actions.
  • Encourage all to achieve excellence in all
    things, to become the most they can.
  • The most important qualities, such as TLJ, are
    the hardest to validly and reliably assess.

51
Conclusion Education is a right and a necessity
onnecessity and a right
  • Education is the foundation of human excellence,
    prosperity, joy and glory. Its acquisition is
    incumbent upon everyone.
  • Knowledge is as wings to life and a ladder for
    our ascent.
  • The root of wrongdoing is ignorance.
  • To be effective, education must address our
    knowing, loving and creating capacities.

52
Extra slides for further explanation
53
Many levels of TLJ
  • Each level includes and builds upon the lower,
    but each higher level transcends quantifiably in
    its capacity for TLJ.
  • Physical/Material/Concrete
  • Mental/Abstract/Conceptual
  • Spiritual/Moral/Ethereal

54
  • Science

mind
thinking
body doing
heart feeling
55
The habits of TLJ as processes of mind, heart and
body
56
Faculties of mind, heart and body to develop
habits of TLJ
  • Mind To Know, Think about, Understand TRUTH
  • Heart To Feel Love for Unity and BEAUTY
  • Body To Will and Do Justice for GOOD

57
Some correlates of TLJ
Truth Love Justice
Consultation/ Investigation Compassion/ Caring Creation/ Construction
Think Feel Do
Authenticity Altruism Autonomy
Truth Beauty Good
58

Understanding Unity Justice
Head Heart Hand
Cognitive Affective Conative
Mind Heart Body
Reason Compassion Courage
59

Logic/ Epistemology Aesthetics/ Axiology Ethics/ Ontology
Objective (It) Subjective (I) Intersubjective (We)
Science Arts Morals
Agency-preservation Eros-transcendence Communion-adaptation
Differentiate Integrate Transcend
Pure Reason Aesthetic Judgment Practical Reason
60
  • Know truth
  • self
  • True Self
  • Feel love
  • Do justice

61
Paradigms and paradigm shifts
  • Paradigms are the mental maps that we use to
    describe the world around us. They are the lens
    that each of us uses to understand everything and
    every thing. The key of a paradigm isn't as much
    in the true nature of a thing as much as our
    perception of the thing. (http//en.wikibooks.org/
    wiki/Seven_Habits_Study_Guide/Paradigms_and_princi
    ples)

62
Individual capacity differs.
  • Everybodys capacity for truth is different. What
    we know and how we know is different.
  • Everybodys capacity for love is different.
    What we love and how we love is different.
  • Everybodys capacity for justice is different.
    What we do and how we act is different.
  • What, when, why, how and how much we use these
    three habits in relationship to one another also
    differs.

63
Teachers
  • need knowledge, skills and dispositions related
    to a host of areas, such as content knowledge,
    pedagogy, assessment and professionalism, but for
    these teachers to be highly effective they must
    teach with the habits of truth, love and justice.

64
Individual and Collective Expressions of TLJ
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