Title: Region 10 Davidson, 2004
1Using the 11 Principles of Effective Character
Education to Start, Strengthen, Assess Your
Program
- Region 10 - Project Character
- School Leadership Team Workshop
- April 3, 2004
- Matthew L. Davidson, Ph.D
- Research Director
- Center for the 4th 5th Rs (Respect
Responsibility) - DavidsonM_at_Cortland.edu
- 607-753-5798
21-Minute Ice-Breaker
- Turn to a neighbor sitting near you and say hello
(if possible, introduce yourself to someone you
dont already know or get the chance to talk to
very often). - Each person should share 1 piece of good news
and 1 thing youre looking forward to in your
life.
3Eleven Principles of Effective Character
EducationFrom The Character Education
Partnership
1. Character education promotes core ethical
values as the basis of good character. 2.
Character must be comprehensively defined to
include thinking, feeling, and behavior. 3.
Effective character education requires an
intentional, proactive, and comprehensive
approach that promotes the core values in all
phases of school life. 4. The school must be a
caring community. 5. To develop character,
students need opportunities for moral action.
4 6. Effective character education includes a
meaningful and challenging academic curriculum
that respects all learners and helps them
succeed. 7. Character education should strive
to develop students intrinsic motivation. 8.
The school staff must become a learning and moral
community in which all share responsibility for
character education and attempt to adhere to the
same core values that guide the education of the
students. 9. Character education requires
moral leadership from both staff and
students. 10. The school must recruit parents
and community members as full partners in the
character-building effort. 11. Evaluation of
character education should assess the character
of the school, the school staffs functioning as
character educators, and the extent to which
students manifest good character.
5What, exactly, is character?
- From its Greek origins, the word character
literally translates as, enduring, lasting, or
distinguishing mark. - Values are how we describe the enduring mark of
individuals and communities. - Character might best be defined as, values in
action.
6Smart versus good Two great goals set against
each other
- Character education is not a new idea. It is,
- in fact, as old as education itself. Down through
- history, in countries all over the world,
education - has had two great goals to help young people
- become smart and to help them become good.
- Tom Lickona, Educating for
Character
7Performance Moral Character
- Performance Character
- The knowledge, habits, dispositions necessary
for achieving human excellence in performance
environmentsin school, extracurricular
activities, in our work. - Moral Character
- The cognitive, emotional, behavioral
dispositions necessary for ethical functioning.
The character that moderates our personal goals
with the interests of those outside of ourselves,
and with shared moral values such as justice
caring, respect responsibility, honesty
integrity.
8- To educate a person in mind and not in morals is
to educate a menace to society. - Theodore
Roosevelt - The good-to-great companies placed greater
weight on character attributes than on specific
educational background, practical skills,
specialized knowledge, or work experience. Not
that specific knowledge or skills are
unimportant, but they viewed these traits as more
teachable (or at least learnable), whereas they
believed dimensions like character, work ethic,
basic intelligence, dedication to fulfilling
commitments, and values are more ingrained. - Jim Collins,
(2001), Good to Great
9How many lies do you have to tell before you are
a liar? M. Josephson
- For students (and adults, too), moral identity is
frequently preserved by bracketing off or
compartmentalizing their moral self. - We do a good job cultivating identities like,
athlete and scholar, artist, but pay little
attention to cultivating moral identity.
10Why the two-dimensional character distinction?
- It acknowledges moral dimension of human
excellence or achievement, AND establishes a role
for character in the realization of human
excellence or achievement. - It reserves a legitimate place for moral
excellence in our quest for human excellence. - If character counts, then show me what it will
do for my GPA Chicago area High school student.
11Performance, Talent Performance Character
- Performance is the outcome (the grade, the honor
or award, the achievement) performance character
are psychological processes that help you pursue
your personal bestwhether the outcome is
realized or not (work ethic, courage,
self-discipline, etc.) - Its possible to achieve performance and not have
performance character. - Talent is the natural ability you are born with
(intellectually, artistically, physically,
morally etc.) Character development is the
process by which you challenge yourself to get
the most from your talent.
12How is Character Developed?
- Character is like a muscular systemnot just one
muscle that must be exercised in order to
develop. - Can muscles be taught? Yes.
- Can muscles develop memory or habits? Yes.
- Can muscles atrophy? Yes, if they are not used
- Muscles have different potential, but all can be
developedjust how much and for how long is what
most want to know.
13What kind of values?
- Performance Values
- Are willing values required for success in
performance environments. - E.g., perseverance, courage, hard work, optimism,
self-control, discipline, orderliness. - Moral Values
- Are values that carry obligation.
- Are universal (universalizable)we would will
all persons act according to them. - Are reversiblewe would want to be treated this
way. - E.g., Respect, responsibility, justice, kindness.
14Values and the Sun
- Like the sun, we cant grasp values in their
entirety. - Values have infinite particulars based on
developmental level, environmental context, and
the value itself. - Remember to teach in layers not lumps!
15Woodens Pyramid of Success
16Westmoor Elementary Skills
- Apologizing (grades 2/3)
- Accepting Consequences (grades 1/2/5)
- Asking for Help (grades K/1/2/3/4)
- Using Brave Talk (grades 1/3 )
- Dealing with an Accusation (grade 2)
- Dealing with Disappointment (grades 3/5)
- Giving and Accepting Compliments (grades 2/3)
- Ignoring (grades 1/2/3)
- Interrupting (grades K/1/2/3)
- Knowing When to Tell (grades 1/3)
17The Faces of Responsibility
18Jeff Beedy Leader to Detractor Scale
- 5 Leader understands role as a contributing
team member actively models the value. - 4 Contributor understands role as a member of
team seeks opportunities to display teamwork. - 3 Participant understands role as a member of
team, but displays little proactive teamwork. - 2 Observer engages in teamwork only when
directed to promote self-interests. - 1 Detractor Detracts from team. No regard for
teammates.
191-Minute Buzz Break
- In groups of 2-4 people list the performance
values and moral values that are critical for
your kids. - Take at least one value and attempt to break it
down into the specific knowledge and skills
required for putting this value into action.
20Principle 6
- Effective character education includes
- a meaningful and challenging academic
- curriculum that respects all learners and
- helps them succeed.
21Character must be taught through the curriculum!
- Through the curriculumformal, informal,
hidden. Make the implicit, explicit. - Through diverse opportunities to help students
develop performance and moral character. - Through direct instruction and through
discussions of emerging teachable moral moments.
Take a standit is essential for student
development! - Through classroom and school-wide discipline that
is fair, consistent, and co-created.
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23The Heartwood Curriculum
- The Heartwood Institute creates ethics curricula
for children from preschool to grade six. - Based on good multicultural children's
literature, the curricula are designed to
introduce a language of ethics and to foster
literacy, good judgment and moral imagination. - Read aloud stories, discussions and activities
promote understanding of the universal attributes
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25- The Heartwood Institute
-
- 425 North Craig Street Suite 302
- Pittsburgh, PA 15213
- 412-688-8570
- 1-800-HEART-10
- hrtwood_at_aol.com
- http//www.heartwoodethics.org
-
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27The Art of Loving Well Table of Contents
- "Cinderella," by Charles Perrault
- "Cinderella," by the Brothers Grimm
- "The City of Trembling Leaves," by Walter van
Tilburn Clark - "Sixteen," by Maureen Daly
- "What Means Switch," by Gish Gen
- "The Makeover of Meredith Kaplan," by Barbara
Girion - "Sonnet 130," by William Shakespeare
- "Love Poem," by John Frederick Nims
- "Too Early Spring," by Stephen Vincent Benet
- The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter, (excerpt) by
Carson McCullers - "Up on Fong Mountain," by Norma Fox Mazer
- "Houseparty," by Walter Bernstein
28The Loving Well Project Nancy McLaren, Project
Director School of Education, Boston
University 605 Commonwealth Ave. Boston, MA
02215 Phone 617/353-4088 Fax
617/353-2909 http//www.bu.edu/education/lovingwel
l/index.html
29Facing History OurselvesExamining History
and Human Behavior
- Foundational beliefs
- Democratic education must be an apprenticeship
in liberty. - History is a moral enterprise.
- Teaching is a craft.
- Adolescents are our future.
- Since 1976 more than 17, 000 educators have
participated in Facing History workshops and
institutes - An estimated 1, 500, 000 students are reached
each year.
30The Facing History Cycle
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32Columbine Elementary SchoolPersonal Social
Responsibility Standards
- Practices organizational skills
- Supports and interacts positively with others
- Takes risks and accepts challenges
- Accepts responsibility for behavior
- Listens attentively, follows directions, stays on
task - Evaluates own learning
- A Advanced B Basic
- I In progress P Proficient
33- Math
- Tries a variety of strategies to solve a problem
- Exhibits a knowledge of basic math facts
- Shows effort
- Social Studies
- Participates in discussion
- Understands concepts
- Completes projects assignments
- Shows effort
- Science
- Works cooperatively in groups
- Understands concepts
- Completes assignments experiments
- Shows effort
34Mr. Shoenecks Standards of Excellence
- I will honor commitments.
- I will only make statements that add value and
stick to the purpose at hand. - I will come to meetings prepared and determined
to contribute. - I will offer alternative proposals to those
things with which I disagree.
35- 5. I will avoid working in isolation and will
seek the thinking of others. - 6. I will not be limited by current boundaries
and limitations. - 7. I will look for How Can We rather than Why
We Cant. - 8. I will focus on helping others toward their
purpose through listening and sharing of
thoughts.
36Reflecting on CharacterMonte Pointe HS,
(Phoenix, AZ)
- Is character important for public figures, or are
skills and performance all that matter? - 2. Write about the character of a person you
greatly admire. How has that persons character
affected you? - 3. As a society, have we lost sight of the
qualities that constitute character?
37- Is character defined by universal qualities or
does it depend on cultural setting and individual
viewpoint? - Describe a defining moment in your life when
your character was shaped or strengthened. What
has been the effect?
381-Minute Buzz Break
- With a colleague from your grade-level or content
area, brainstorm two character in the curriculum
connectionsone performance character and one
moral characterusing the character in the
curriculum activity sheet.
39Why Be Good?
- This all important question has many different
answersreward, recognition, punishment,
disproval, cultural influence. - Motivation is the bridge between what we know and
what we do. - Whats the motivation for elementary-age
students? For middle and high school students?
40Principle 7
- Character education should strive to
- develop students self-motivation.
41Character Education is an inside job!
- Character education must develop self-motivation,
students who Do what is right, even if nobody is
looking. - Competence in reaching those goals must be
internally referenced, monitored, pursued. - When it comes to promoting self-motivated
individuals - Tangible extrinsic rewards used primarily for
controlling peoples behavior tend to undermine
intrinsic motivation AND self-regulation. - Extrinsic rewards are less detrimental if they
are not used contingently and if the social
context is oriented more towards support than
control. - Verbal rewards that convey information or
feedback that affirms peoples competence tend to
maintain or enhance intrinsic motivation.
42Do you have outies or innies?
- Do your students worry only about the final
outcome? - Do your students have a helpless response to
success or failure? - Can they make sense of an outcome and create a
better plan for the future?
43Outies, Innies, Whats The Difference
- Outer-focused individuals experience
- Increased performance anxiety.
- Helpless response to success failure
- Q How did this happen? A I dont know
- Less personal enjoyment or satisfaction from the
activity. - Inner-focused individuals experience
- Increased self-reflection and self-awareness.
- Strong intrinsic motivation.
- A healthy approach to competition, with less
performance moral character clashes. - Are Less likely to engage in gaming strategies.
44Developing the Complete Moral PersonHead, Heart,
and Hand
- Developing Innies interconnects head, heart,
and hand - Through careful individual planning,
self-assessment, and skill development. - Through a balance of community support
challenge for individual strengths and
weaknesses. - By providing a sense of control over our
behavior. - Empowering students to understand, monitor, and
change their behaviors.
45Benjamin Franklins Virtues
- 1. Temperance 8. Silence
- 2. Order 9. Resolution
- 3. Frugality 10. Industry
- 4. Sincerity 11. Justice
- 5. Moderation 12. Cleanliness
- 6. Tranquility 13. Chastity
- 7. Humility
46Character Record Book
- How have I shown respect today?
- How have I failed to show respect today?
- How will I show respect tomorrow?
- Franklin Classical Charter School
47Got Goals?
- Directions In the three columns below list at
least 5 goals - for each category. When you have listed at least
5 goals for - each category, circle your top 3 goals and rank
them by - order of importance.
-
- Academic Extra-Curricular Character
- For each of your goals from each category above,
list - potential assistance you will need (from friends,
coaches, - teachers, etc.) to help you reach your goals.
48100 Goals
- Write at least 100 goals.
- Divide them into categories.
- E.g., education, career, fun/adventure,
spiritual, travel, reading, learning, etc. - Select the 10 most important goals.
- Write a paragraph explaining the importance of
your 1 goal. - Hal Urban, Teacher, Redwood
City, CA
49Trouble Card
- How to avoid trouble and make a good decision
- Is this something that would be considered wrong
by my parents, teachers, or religion? - Does it go against my conscience?
- Will it have bad consequences, now or in the
future? - Will I feel sorry after doing it?
- Will it cause me to lose self-respect?
- (adapted from Phyllis Smith-Hansen, Lansing
Middle School)
50Essential Character Activity
- What is one thing you could do to improve your
schools approach to recognizing and celebrating
good character? - Take one of your schools values and create an
innie-promoting, self-monitoring tool for
students.
51Principle 8
- The school staff must become a learning
- moral community in which all share
- responsibility for character education
- attempt to adhere to the same core values
- that guide the education of the students.
52You must be the change you wish to see in the
world
- Character educators need not be
perfectthankfully! - They must be committedto a process of ongoing
growth and development. - Effective character education requires TIME
DIALOGUE. - E.g., Lansing Mission Statement Survey.
53The People, The Process, Priming The Pump
- The People involved in planning, implementing,
and modeling the shared values of the community. - The Processes for reflecting on consistency and
effectiveness in realizing character
goalspersonal and collective. - Priming the Pump by providing the time and
training required for ongoing personal
development and program improvement.
54The Stories We Tell Ourselves
- In Professional Learning Communities at Work,
DuFour and Eaker (1998) argue, cultures are
defined by the stories we tell ourselves. These
stories - Help clarify our values
- Reveal our view of the world
- Reinforce our interpretation of events
- Instruct us on appropriate conduct
- Identify heroes and villains
- Data offer us an opportunity to tell a story.
- The story of our data and how we interpret it
is essential to our growth development.
55Story Lines That Wont Lead to Growth
Development
- We dont care what a few people say, everybody
knows this is a good place. - By the time that get to high school, its too
late for character education. - I dont have the time for character education.
- There must be a program or person that is
supposed to be doing this. - Between the lack of parent involvement and the
media, theres not much we can do.
56Mission-Driven Schools Classrooms
- Individual identity is developed at least in part
through participation in communities with a clear
and cohesive institutional identitynot a class,
a way of life. - Exemplary schools of character are mission-driven
schools that provide students with a clear sense
of what it means to be a member of this
community. - The Roosevelt Way
- The Souhegan Six
57The Souhegan SixSouhegan HS, New Hampshire
- Respect and encourage the right to teach and the
right to learn at all times. - Be actively engaged in the learning ask
questions, collaborate, and seek solutions. - Be on time to fulfill your daily commitments.
- Be appropriate demonstrate behavior that is
considerate of the community, the campus, and
yourself. - Be truthful communicate honestly.
- Be responsible and accountable for your choices.
58Fenway High School Motto
- Work Hard.
- Be Yourself.
- Do the Right Thing.
59St. Benedicts Prep
- Whatever hurts my brother, hurts me.
60Research by Kathryn Wentzel on Middle School
Teachers Indicates That
- Teachers who do the following
- Have high expectations for students
- Avoid negative feedback and are nurturing
- Are fair and use democratic forms of
communication - Cultivate motivation for learning and school
- Set clear rules
- Have students who
- Possess prosocial and achievement motivation
- Have a sense of personal mastery and control
- Engage in more prosocial and less irresponsible
behavior - Get higher grades in school
61Responsibility, Efficacy, The Character
Educators Challenge
- In general, educators report a very high sense of
responsibility for character education. - However, this is juxtaposed by very low self
reports of efficacy in doing character education.
- Nevertheless, character educators tend to
overestimate the frequency, quality, and impact
of their character education efforts. - Herein lies the challenge to develop educators
who feel responsible and capable for CE, and who
regularly utilize multiple and diverse methods
for reflecting on their actual effectiveness.
62Practice what you preach, but dont forget to
preach what you practice!
- Adults need to increase their character education
practices. They also need to Preach what they
practice so that the youth experience is caught
and taught. - Making your Truth Signs chronically accessible
- We only learn from our mistakes if we have the
courage to make them. - Any job worth doing is worth doing well.
- There are no failures, just disappointments when
you have done your best.John Wooden
63The Intangibles of Best Practice
- Frequently, inadequate implementation of
character education is NOT from lack of interest
or commitment, but instead a need for - More time
- More training
- More or better curricular resources
- Organizational assistance
- Changes in scheduling
- Etc.
641-Minute Buzz Break
- In your grade-level groups, work in pairs to
complete the activity, Teachers as Role-Models
Activity - Share out with the group.
65Principle 9
- Character education requires moral
- leadership from both staff and students.
66Authentic Involvement
- Character education is something we do with
studentsnot to them. - Students can drive the program if they are given
the responsibility and the required skills. - Problem-focused advisory group, discipline
committee, cross-age mentoring, etc - E.g., St. Leonard Elementary School Kids
Character Committee, Lansing Middle school
language survey, MKA honor code, Souhegan High
School student government.
67- People resolve conflicts without fighting,
insults, or threats.
- People try to get others to follow the rules.
- When children see someone being picked on, they
try to stop it.
- People do not care if others cheat.
68The Giraffe Project
69The Giraffe Process
- Hear The Story
- Learn from the Giraffe story-bank of real heroes
and heroines - Tell The Story
- Look for giraffes in your community and share
their story - Be The Story
- Stick your neck out for worthy causes that need
your help
70Sample Giraffe Story
- As an eighth-grader, Sarah Swagart decided it was
wrong for young skateboarders to be treated like
criminals, threatened with fines of as much as
500 and 90 days in jail. - Not a skateboarder herself, she could see that
the kids might be annoying, but they definitely
were not criminals. - She formed Nobody Special, an organization
whose mission is to get the skateboarders a
placeand to get the community to see them as
athletes, not hoodlums. - She got commitment from the SeaBees at Whidbey
Naval Air Station to do the construction
businesses donated materials and theyre on the
sidewalks raising a mile of money26,400 dollar
bills.
71Compelling Giraffe Statistics
- The number who thought nothing could be done to
solve community problems dropped by 55 - The number who agreed that they should help solve
such problems went up by 27 - Those who chose celebrities as heroes dropped by
50
721-Minute Buzz Break
- As a grade-level group, make three columns on a
piece of scrap paper (assign a group recorder to
capture the thoughts of the group) . In the
first column list ways that students are
currently involved in authentic leadership for
your character education program. In the second
column list additional ways students could be
more authentically involved. In the third column,
list any between-building leadership
opportunities for your students (e.g.,
Middle-Elem, HS-Middle, etc.).
73Principle 10
- The school must recruit parents and
- community members as full partners in
- the character-building effort.
74Parents Need Help Walking the Performance/Moral
Character Tightrope
- Developing both performance and moral character
requires their help. - Education is needed for both!
75A lot Easier Said than Done
- A report focusing on the difficulty of raising
children of integrity and character in America
today. - In general, the report indicates a majority of
parents reporting they believe character
development outcomes are essential, but also
believe they are doing an inadequate job in their
own character development efforts.
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7710 Priorities fromThe Biggest Job Well Ever
Have(Laura Malcolm Gauld 2002)
- Truth over harmony
- Principles over rules
- Attitude over aptitude
- Set high expectations and let go of outcomes
- Value success and failure
- Allow obstacles to become opportunities
- Take hold and let go
- Create a character culture
- Humility to ask for and accept health
- Inspiration Job 1
78Principle 11
- Evaluation of character education should
- assess the character of the school, the
- school staffs functioning as character
- educators, the extent to which students
manifest good character.
79Reflective Practitioning in the Character
Education Cycle
- Effective character education is a dynamic,
cyclical, ongoing, never ending process of
attempting to create zones of optimal character
development that challenge and engage.
80The Steps of Reflective Practice
- Brainstorm
- Organize
- Prioritize
- Plan
- Implement
- Reflect
- Begin again
81The Key to Effective Program Planning and
Evaluation
- We must be able to define our constructs if we
hope to - Effectively reach our educational objective
- Effectively measure our progress
82The Responsive Classroom Program Components
- Classroom organization
- Provides for active interest areas for students,
space for student-created displays of work and an
appropriate mix of whole class and individual
instruction - A morning meeting format
- Provides children the daily opportunity to
practice greetings, conversation, sharing and
problem solving - Rules and logical consequences
- Generated, modeled and role-played with the
children that become the cornerstone of classroom
life.
83- Academic choice time for all children
- Provides them with the necessity of taking
control of their own learning in some meaningful
way, both individually and cooperatively - Guided discovery of learning materials, areas of
the room, curriculum content and ways of behaving - Moves children through a deliberate and careful
introduction to each new experience - Assessment and reporting to parents
- An evolving process of mutual communication and
understanding
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85Using Data to Drive Practice
- Coaches Checklist
- School as a Caring Community Profile-II (SCCP-II)
- Character Education Quality Standards A
self-assessment Tool for Schools and Districts - Global Portraits of Social and Moral Health
- ITCSQ
86Sample Reflection Tools
- Journal Reflections
- Create a personal mission statement.
- Verbal feedback using a whip
- I liked, next time we might
- Sentence completion tests (3X5 cards)
- One specific way I show respect is
- Interviews
- Teacher-student, student-student,
student-community member - Observations
- Cafeteria, extracurriculars, bus, etc.
87Lansing Middle School Focus Group
- One specific behavior that indicates a lack of
character is - This behavior indicates a need to develop what
value or skill
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89The Faces of Responsibility
90How might your students answer the following
questions?
- When students see another student being mean,
they try to stop it. - Students try to comfort a peer who has
experienced sadness. - Students help new students feel accepted.
- Students help each other, even if they are not
friends. - Students can talk to their teachers about
problems that are bothering them.
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92Reflective practice a process of constantly
righting the flight
- We must constantly bootstrap between our ideal
path and our current reality. - We must make in flight corrections or risk
arriving at the wrong, or unplanned
destinationor worse.
93I laughed, I cried, I decided to try..
- Following todays discussion, write down 1 or 2
specific things you plan to utilize within your
sphere of influence to develop performance
moral character. - Challenge yourself to begin by finding 30 total
minutes per week devoted to developing
performance moral character (monitor by keeping
a record). - Challenge yourself as a professional ethical
learning community to find 30 minutes every 2
weeks where you share, reflect upon, refocus
your efforts.