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A Presentation By: Amanda Deich! Kimberly Pickup!! AND Jessica Damitz!! – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Presentation By:


1
Leadership, Affective Learning and Moral
Development
  • A Presentation By
  • Amanda Deich!
  • Kimberly Pickup!!
  • AND
  • Jessica Damitz!!

2
LEADERSHIP
  • Leadership one of five U.S. Department of
    Education categories of giftedness
  • -leadership training for gifted students
    can provide leaders who have both the
    intellectual creative potential to lead
  • -gifted education should promote a
    strong concern for less fortunate individuals
    plus a leadership capability
  • Enrichment programs community service
  • -promote a concern for others and willingness
    to help

3
Student Leadership
  • Teachers evaluate student leadership according
    to
  • Carries responsibility well and can be counted on
    to do what has been promised
  • Is self-confident with both age-mates and adults
    seems comfortable when showing personal work to
    the class
  • Is well liked
  • Is cooperative, avoids bickering, and is
    generally easy to get a long with
  • Can express him-or herself clearly
  • Adapts to new situations is flexible in thought
    and action and is not disturbed when the normal
    action and is not disturbed when the normal
    routine is changed
  • Enjoys being around other people
  • Tends to dominate usually directs activities
  • Participates in most school social activities
    can be counted on to be there
  • Excels in sports

4
16 Traits of Leadership (California Association
for the Gifted)
  • Assertive decision making
  • Altruistic
  • Persuasive/innovator
  • Sensitive to the needs of others
  • Ability to be a facilitator
  • Goal-oriented
  • Charismatic
  • Persistent (hangs in there)
  • 9. Organizational ability
  • 10. Resourceful
  • 11. Accepts Responsibility
  • 12. Strong Communication
  • Skills
  • 13. Competent
  • (knowledgeable)
  • 14. Integrity
  • 15. Risk-taker
  • 16. Creative

5
Leadership Training
  • Leadership is personal, not positional.
  • Classroom Monitorships-regulate behavior of peers
    or other jobs
  • Mentorships-tutor peers or younger students
  • In-school leadership projects-improving student
    behavior, safety, sanitation, etc.
  • Community Projects-students tackle neighborhood
    problems or undesirable conditions
  • Simulations-establishing banks and stores,
    making rules, and establishing a legal system for
    maintaining the rules

6
Communication
  • Geometric Communication
  • Can speak and use non-verbal gestures.
  • Can speak, but NO non-verbal gestures (hands
    behind back or sit on them)
  • Can use non-verbal gestures, but CANNOT speak.
  • Can speak, but cannot face the group (no
    non-verbal gestures).
  • Allowed to describe figures by speaking
    gesturing but have to SHOUT.
  • Round 2
  • Conditions stay the same except condition 5
    changes
  • from shouting to whispering

7
The goal of a leader is to mobilize effort
toward a specific goal.
  • Importance of
  • -verbal skills-tone, speed, clarity,
    specificity
  • -non-verbal skills-proximity, face, hands,
    body
  • Questions
  • -Are you effective when you are yelling?
    whispering?
  • -Are your partners receptive?
  • -Are you conveying confidence?
  • -Does your style change?
  • -How is anxiety level affected by the conditions?
  • Purpose
  • -tone -attitude
  • -confidence -feedback

8
Risk-Taker
  • Public Speaking Exercise
  • 1.The first student picks a topic out of a hat
    and delivers a 60 second speech about it.
  • 2.When the first student is finished, teacher
    quickly and randomly chooses the next student to
    go.
  • 3.This student chooses their own topic, but is
    expected to incorporate what the previous student
    said into his/her speech as well.
  • 4.This exercise is repeated until all students
    have spoken.
  • 5.Dont be nervous and HAVE FUN!

9
Fake it til you make it.
  • tone
  • confidence
  • body language
  • stay positive
  • good leaders are good listeners
  • FACT Words are only 7 of your communication.
    93 is in your tone of voice and your body
    language.
  • BE LIKE THE DUCK!

10
Be the change you wish to see in the world.
Ghandi
  • I Am the Change-project action plan

ISSUE What problems do you want to change? GOALS METHOD How will you change it? Describe your 3-5 step plan to change it. RESOURCES Will you need other people to help you? Will you need supplies or equipment? TIMELINE When will you start? What takes place in the middle of your project? When will it be completed? OUTCOMES List the top three results that you will see if your project is successful.

11
Affective Learning
  • What is it?
  • Learning related to emotion and feeling
  • Why is it important when teaching gifted,
    talented, and creative children?
  • Just as we try to strengthen the cognitive
    skills of students who already are cognitively
    superior, we also can help affectively superior
    students to better understand themselves and
    their values, to be more empathetic towards
    others, and generally to acquire high-level
    values, ethics, achievement needs, and humanistic
    attitudes (Davis Rimm, p. 170).

12
Facets of Self
  • Write down five roles you have in your family,
    friendships, or community.
  • Take a moment to think
  • What characteristics or traits do you have that
    help you succeed at these roles?

13
Facets of Self cont
  • The Many Faces of You! Activity
  • Using as many faces of the block that you want
    to, create a symbol, picture, character, or other
    representation of a part of you.

14
Facets of Self, cont
  • We all have many facets of ourselves
  • A person may perceive an academic self, a social
    self, an emotional self, and a physical self
  • Gifted students identify themselves more as
    academic selves than as social selves!!! (p.
    171).

15
Whats your self-concept and self-worth?
  • Think back to your wooden block
  • 3 Underachieving gifted students and adults
    have worse self-concepts and lower self-esteem
    than high-achieving gifted persons (p. 171).
  • 4 Your self-concept is created via assessments
    or reflections from others.

16
Self-Concept Self Worth, cont
  • 5 self-accepting values
  • whole self, despite faults.
  • self-rejecting considers self
  • to be of little worth.
  • 6 Academic failure implies
  • low worth.
  • 7 Excuses and rationalizations
  • may be used to protect the self-concept.

17
Self-Concept Self Worth, cont
  • 8 Self-Esteem and pride are greatest when the
    student succeeds at a difficult task the success
    is attributed to both high ability and high
    effort (p. 171).
  • 9 MOST IMPORTANT!!!!
  • All students are strongly motivated to protect
    their feelings of self-esteem (p. 171).
  • Deliberate Underachieving

18
What happens when their needs arent met?
  • Deliberate Underachieving Achievement by
    Accident (Failure Avoidance)
  • Compulsive High Achievement (Failure Avoidance
    combined with Strong Need to Achieve)
  • Denial of Accomplishment (Does not take
    responsibility for failing or succeeding)

19
What to do
  • One solution (most important!)
  • Individualized Instruction

20
What Qualities Does a Humanistic Teacher Possess?
  • Good self-concept
  • Honest and genuine
  • Likes and accepts others
  • Concerned with welfare of humans
  • Sensitive and responsive to needs
  • Open to different viewpoints
  • Takes control of life and environment
  • Advocate for change
  • Vibrant and spontaneous

21
Moral Development Kohlbergs 6 Stages
  • Pre-conventional Level (ages 0-9) consequences of
    an action
  • Stage 1 obedience good behavior avoid
    punishment
  • Stage 2 right action produces rewards
  • Conventional Level (ages 9-15) behavior
    influenced by pressure, social conventions,
    expectations
  • Stage 3 good behavior to please others
  • Stage 4 right action base on rules and authority

22
Moral Development Kohlbergs 6 Stages
  • Post-conventional Level (ages 16 ) highly
    desirable acceptance of universal and personal
    moral principles
  • Stage 5 right action defined by general rights
    and standards that are agreed upon
  • Stage 6 only a few have self-chosen principles
    and ethics based upon universal principles and
    rights of justice and equality

Did you know Only 10 15 of adults reach
this level, gifted tend to reach moral reasoning
during secondary school years?
23
Apply Kohlberg to the Classroom
  • Expose students to concepts just one step higher
    than their current stage and encourage them to
    think at this more mature stage.
  • What does that look like?
  • Role play practice moral decisions that require
    high-level moral thinking due to moral dilemmas

24
Promoting Positive Values
  • What can we do, as educators, to promote positive
    values since they are in a crisis?

25
Strategies for Encouraging Affective Growth (pgs.
201-204)
  • Are you someone who..
  • Mini-Speech about me
  • Whats It Like?
  • Magic Circle
  • Reverse brainstorming How many ways can you be
    rude at school?
  • Analogical thinking How is a good person like a
    good pizza?
  • What would happen if? We all ignored all safety
    rules?
  • In What Ways? Might I show my appreciation to
    those who are helpful to me?

What a great way to begin the school year by
creating a community of empathetic learners!
26
THE END
  • Special Thanks to
  • Davis, G. Rimm, S. (2003). Education of the
    gifted and talented, 5th ed. Boston Allyn
    Bacon, Inc.
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