The Organized Teacher's Guide to Building Character,
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About this ebook
Learn to teach character traits to your students
The Organized Teacher's Guide to Building Character, a comprehensive resource that will help you implement character education into your lesson plans. The book features ten plans (one for each month of the school year), each focusing on a different character trait, including Respect and Responsibility, Honesty, Courage, Fairness and Self-Discipline.
- A multitude of ideas, books, videos, etc, to use with children of different ages.
- Complete lesson plans incorporate easy-to-access materials that a teacher may already have in her classroom or library.
Topics include:
Respect and Responsibility; Loyalty/Friendship; Kindness/Caring; Self-Discipline/Self-Control; Perseverance/Diligence; Honesty; Courage; Fairness; Gratitude and Integrity
Steve Springer
Steve Springer is the author of five books, including two bestsellers, and has been a journalist for more than thirty years, the last twenty-five with the Los Angeles Times. Steve Springer es el autor de cinco libros, incluyendo dos bestsellers, y ha sido periodista por más de 30 años—los últimos 25 han sido con el Los Angeles Times. Es ganador del Nate Fleischer Award, un gran logro profesional y honor otorgado por el Boxing Writers' Association of America. Actualmente vive en Los Ángeles con su familia.
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The Organized Teacher's Guide to Building Character, - Steve Springer
ideas.
I
Lesson Ideas for the Year
1
FIRST MONTH OF SCHOOL
Responsibility and Respect
Your family is at a neighborhood function—perhaps a church gathering, a street barbecue, or a car wash fund-raiser for your school—and one of your friends begins to make fun of an elderly person using a walker. What are some things you can do?
First Month of School
The best time to discuss responsibility and respect is at the very beginning of the school year. As you and your students develop classroom expectations, rules, and boundaries through a democratic process, you can make a conscious effort to teach your students about important character traits such as responsibility and respect. This is an opportunity to teach them about being responsible not only at school, but also at home and within their community. They will learn about respect for the environment, as well as for diversity of people.
List of Activities and/or Lesson Ideas
• Students brainstorm using the Web Organizer and then write sentences or an essay using the organizer.
• Students create and role-play scripts about responsible behavior.
• After hearing Being Responsible: A Book About Responsibility by Mary Small read aloud, students illustrate and label two ways in which characters from the book show responsibility.
• Students write about and/or illustrate situations that compare and contrast responsibilities of today with those of long ago.
• Students develop a Class Pledge/Slogan/Mantra Poster about being responsible at school.
• Students critique a television show about characters showing responsibility.
• Students create a Responsibility Flower with at least five petals to show responsibilities that they have either at home or at school.
• Students develop a responsibility list and use it in developing classroom rules.
• Students discuss the meaning of responsibility as represented in quotations provided.
• Students write one to three paragraphs describing the importance of exercising their responsibility to protect the rain forests.
• After hearing The Lorax by Dr. Seuss read aloud, students develop a class list of environmental hazards and their effects by completing the Character Trait Cause and Effect Organizer.
• Students take responsibility for recycling school paper and lunch materials.
• Students work in groups to create posters promoting the school recycling program, reminding students and staff what is recyclable, and pointing out why it is so important to recycle.
• Students write about a story that demonstrates responsibility from the website karmatube.org.
• Using given scenarios, students create a skit that demonstrates a responsible outcome and perform it for the whole class.
• Students view an episode of The Little Rascals and critique it for responsible behavior shown by the characters.
• Students use new vocabulary to write about which responsibilities they feel are most important for citizens and why they feel this way.
• After students listen to the book Angel Child, Dragon Child by Michele Maria Surat, they develop a class list of respectful behavior.
• Students make a list of do’s and don’ts for treating people with respect.
• Students role-play respectful behavior through puppets.
• Students identify respectful and disrespectful behavior in their favorite television show.
• Students create posters illustrating what respect
looks like.
• Students use synonyms to develop a list of compliments to demonstrate that it’s more respectful to compliment than to criticize.
• Students create a class list of examples showing what respect means in terms of inclusion and diversity.
• Students view an episode of The Simpsons that shows respectful and/or disrespectful behavior.
• Using a Venn Diagram Organizer, students learn about their similarities and differences and write about them in a respectful way.
• Students create posters showing respectful language versus disrespectful language.
• Students work in groups to create a skit that demonstrates respect and disrespect in the same scene.
• Students make cards for people living in a local shelter or convalescent home.
• Students write and perform a poem or song about respect.
Recommended Movies/Videos/Television Programs
• Television: The Simpsons, other animated television show, family sitcom, or cartoon
Resources
• Cooperative Children’s Book Center—http://www.education.wisc.edu/ccbc
The Cooperative Children’s Book Center (CCBC) is a vital gathering place for books, ideas, and expertise.
• EdHelper.com—www.edhelper.com
Jean Learns About Rights and Responsibilities of Citizens,
reading handout with additional materials, by Patti Hutchison
• KarmaTube—www.karmatube.org
KarmaTube is a collection of short, do something
videos coupled with simple actions that every viewer could perform.
• KidSource online—http://www.kidsource.com/kidsource/content/behavior.html
Helping Your Child Learn Responsible Behavior with Activities for Children,
edited by Theodor Rebarber
• Dr. Robyn Silverman—http://drrobyn.wordpress.com/2008/04/12/10-tips-on-teaching-respect-to-children-you-cant-get-it-if-you-dont-give-it/
10 Tips on Teaching Respect to Children: You can’t get it if you don’t give it!
by Dr. Robyn J.A. Silverman
• The Creative Teacher. Steve Springer, Brandy Alexander, and Kimberly Persiani-Becker. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2006. (ISBN 9780071472807)
Annotated Bibliography
• Avi. The Secret School. 2003. (ISBN 9780152046996)
In 1925, a fourteen-year-old girl secretly takes over as teacher when her one-room schoolhouse in rural Colorado is closed a month and a half before the summer break. Ida Bidson protests, because without exit exams she cannot move on to high school in the fall. She takes over, swearing the students to secrecy. It’s no easy task, and she takes on great responsibility along with her farm chores and her own studies. When the county examiner discovers the secret, he agrees to keep it, but only if all the students take a final exam. (Responsibility, Grades 5–8)
• Brinckloe, Julie. Fireflies. 1986. (ISBN 9780689710551)
A young boy is proud of having caught a jar full of fireflies, which seems to him like owning a piece of moonlight, but as the light begins to dim he realizes he must set the insects free or they will die. (Responsibility, Grades K–3)
• Cherry, Lynne. The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest. 2000. (ISBN 9780152026141)
A man goes into the rain forest one day to chop down a great kapok tree. He soon grows tired and falls asleep. Animals of the forest come to him to ask him to spare their home. When he awakes and sees the animals, he leaves the rain forest without chopping down the tree. (Responsibility, Grades K–3)
• Fox, Mem. Wilfrid Gordon McDonald Partridge. 1989. (ISBN 9780916291266)
Wilfred Gordon McDonald Partridge lives next door to a nursing home in which several of his friends reside. His favorite is Miss Nancy Alison Delacourt Cooper, because she has four names just like he does. The only problem is that Miss Nancy, who is 96, has lost
her memory. Wilfred sets out to find
Miss Nancy’s memory for her. (Respect, Grades K–8)
• Kunjufu, Jawanza. A Culture of Respect. 2007. (ISBN 9781934155066)
This book emphasizes the value of space that supports mutual respect among teachers and classmates. It helps to foster a sense of courtesy in students, leading to a calmer, more focused classroom. (Respect, Grades K–2)
• Loewen, Nancy. Do I Have To?: Kids Talk About Responsibility. 2002. (ISBN 9781404800304)
An advice-column format is used to define responsibility as a character value and demonstrate how it can be used in daily situations. (Responsibility, Grades K–4)
• Nelson, Robin. Respecting Others. 2003. (ISBN 9780822512868)
This book serves as an introduction to respecting yourself, friends, parents, teachers, people you don’t know, and the earth, with specific examples of how to show respect at home and at school. (Responsibility, Grades 2–5)
• Raatma, Lucia. Responsibility. 2001. (ISBN 9780736891561)
This book explains what responsibility is and how readers can practice it at home, at school, in the community, and with each other. (Responsibility, Grades K–3)
• Roberts, Cynthia. Responsibility. 2007. (ISBN 9781592966769)
Real-life examples show young people taking responsibility for chores and tasks. (Responsibility, Grades 3–6)
• Seuss, Dr. The Lorax. 1971. (ISBN 9780394823379)
Long before saving the earth became a global concern, Dr. Seuss, speaking through his character the Lorax, warned against mindless progress and the danger it posed to the earth’s natural beauty. In this classic story, the Once-ler describes how his greedy actions destroyed a beautiful and thriving environment. There are subtle messages about the negative effects of deforestation, habitat destruction, and air and water pollution. (Responsibility, Grades K–6)
• Silverstein, S. (1986). The Giving Tree. (ISBN 9780060256654)
This story is told throughout the life of a boy as he grows to adulthood and the tree that selflessly gives him her resources throughout the years. It reminds us about the gift of giving and the capacity to love. (Responsibility, Grades K–8)
• Small, Mary. Being Responsible: A Book About Responsibility. 2006. (ISBN 9781404817883)
Young people are shown taking responsibility for chores and tasks in real-life examples. (Responsibility, Grades K–3)
• Surat, Michele Maria. Angel Child, Dragon Child. 1989. (ISBN 9780590422710)
A young girl named Ut encounters difficulties with children at school because they see only how she seems different from them. They learn, however, that all people have the same feelings. (Respect, Grades K–5)
Teaching Tools
Definitions
What does responsibility
mean? Those who follow directions and are good listeners show responsible behavior. People who show responsibility help others as well as themselves, and they are accountable for their own behavior.
What does respect
mean? People who show respect treat others the way they want to be treated. They are courteous and polite toward one another; they honor others and their viewpoints. People who show respect are considerate of their surroundings and their environment, in addition to people.
Responsibility Quotations
• It is not only for what we do that we are held responsible, but also for what we do not do.
(Molière)
• Life is a gift, and it offers us the privilege, opportunity, and responsibility to give something back by becoming more.
(Anthony Robbins)
• Life is a promise; fulfill it.
(Mother Teresa)
• No alibi will save you from accepting the responsibility.
(Napoleon Hill)
• If you want children to keep their feet on the ground, put some responsibility on their shoulders.
(Abigail Van Buren)
Respect Quotations
• Respect for ourselves guides our morals; respect for others guides our manners.
(Laurence Sterne)
• They cannot take away our self-respect if we do not give it to them.
(Mahatma Gandhi)
• When men and women are able to respect and accept their differences, then love has a chance to blossom.
(John Gray)
• I must respect the opinions of others even if I disagree with them.
(Herbert Henry Lehman)
• If one doesn’t respect oneself, one can have neither love nor respect for others.
(Ayn Rand)
Responsibility Questions
• What responsibilities do you feel you have toward your classmates? Your parents or family? People in your community?
• Do you think of yourself as someone who is responsible? If so, how?
• What might our society be like if people weren’t responsible for their actions?
• In what ways do the adults in your life show responsibility?
• Is there ever a time when you should not take responsibility for your own actions? Have you ever been in this situation before?
Respect Questions
• What are some examples of disrespect that you see in people here at school? In the community? At home?
• Do you have to be friends with someone in order to be respectful to them? Can you be respectful to someone even if you don’t like him or her? If you don’t even know him or her?
• How might you show respect to people who are different from you? Is it harder to respect someone who is very different from you?
• Is it ever okay to treat others with disrespect?
• What are the benefits of treating people with respect?
Responsibility Vocabulary
Respect Vocabulary
Lesson Ideas
Responsibility at School and at Home: Part 1
• To give students some background knowledge to use in the Web Organizer discussion, ask students to speak with their parents about all the things they do at home and at school that they are responsible for. It might be helpful to send these ideas home on paper for the younger students (grades K–2); parents can transcribe responses, then send the sheet back to school with the child the next day.
• Using students’ ideas, fill in a School Responsibility
Web Organizer by listing the students’ responses for all the things they are responsible for at school.
• Students then fill in their own Home Responsibility
Web Organizer, listing all the things they are responsible for at home. For kindergarten and first grade, you might use the parents’ transcription of the students’ responses and fill in another Web Organizer on the board.
• For grades 3–8, you may ask students to complete a third Web Organizer to list things they do in their community or for the environment that show responsibility.
• These organizers will be used for the next activity.
• The Creative Teacher contains fun graphic organizers that can also be used.
Responsibility at School and at Home: Part 2
• Students will use both (grades K–2) or all three (grades 3–8) Web Organizers from the previous activity to write 4 to 5 prompted sentences (K), a 6- to 7-sentence paragraph (grade 1), a 3-paragraph essay (grade 2), or a 5- to 7-paragraph essay (grades 3–8) explaining what they do at home, at school, and in the community or for the environment that shows them being responsible citizens.
• Sentence/Paragraph 1 will demonstrate their knowledge about what responsibility means. Sentence/Paragraph 2 will demonstrate the ways they are responsible at home. Sentence/Paragraph 3 will demonstrate the ways they are responsible at school. Sentences 4–7 (K–1) will end with closing sentences about responsibility in general. Paragraphs 4–7 (grades 3–8) will demonstrate the students showing responsibility in the community and for the environment. You will model this activity for students using Web Organizers to help students organize their writing.
Developing Scripts About Responsibilities
• Provide a prepared script on the overhead in which a teacher asks students to show responsibility by cleaning out their desks before they leave at the end of the school day. The script should show a student who has not done this, the discussion that takes place between the teacher and the student, and the corrective actions taken by the child to fix the problem.
• After viewing the script, students will engage in a whole-class discussion about the right thing to do.
• Students then create their own scripts. Suggest another way of showing responsibility at school to kindergarten and grade 1 students; they will work in groups of 4 or 5 students to come up with a way to address the issue and then share it with the class. Parent volunteers or a teacher aide can be helpful with this activity. Grade 2–6 students will also work in small groups to develop a script that demonstrates students being responsible at school. Each group will act out its script for the rest of the class. On another day, repeat the activity with ways to show responsibility at home.
• If this activity is done at home, the teacher and student can act out scripts together and discuss alternative solutions.
Identifying Responsible Characters in Books
• Read Being Responsible: A Book About Responsibility by Mary Small aloud to the class. Together with learning about being fair, respectful, trustworthy, and caring, students will learn the qualities of being a responsible person. This book includes real-life examples about being responsible, including examples that most children can understand immediately and recognize in their own lives.
• After the book is read aloud, students will illustrate and label two ways that characters from the book are shown being responsible.
• Ask students to illustrate two ways that they themselves are responsible at home or at school (or one of each).
• If this activity is done at home, students can continue to do this each day as an opening activity for the daily lesson about responsibility.
Developing Interview Questions About Responsibilities Long Ago
• Working together with the students, compile a list of interview questions to ask parents, older aunts or uncles, or grandparents. Suggested questions include When you were a child, what kind of chores did you have to do before you could go out and play?
and When you went to school, what did your teachers expect of you?
The Interview Organizer may help students with this activity.
• Students will write down the answers