On Character Education
By Mr King
Living in the United States, in California, in Los Angeles, and in the
fall of 2005 as a 35-year old married, Caucasian, male, elementary school
substitute teacher with 4½ years of experience in Los Angeles Unified
School District, presently in my final 6 months of preparation for becoming
a credentialed secondary school English teacher, I find myself concerned
with the honestly overwhelming questions addressing the character, integrity,
ethics, and values of my students and indeed all people within the community,
society, nation, and world in which my as yet unborn children will live,
indeed -- in which we all will live.
The education of character is something that I think and feel we must address
in this society, in the United States, in 2005, because of the fact that
so much seems to show us that American ethics, values, principles, and
morals have worn away, been torn down, been completely stripped away, or
never in fact even existed in our Hollywood, Capitalist, media-spun, Wag
the Dog, Governator, hip-hop, gangster rapper, disposable, fast-food, super-size
me, reality television, Flamin’ Hot Cheetos, plastic surgery, virtual
insanity, Barbie doll, No Fear, Gimme’ some more, nips and tucks, bumps
and lumps, profit-driven mega-American super-consumer culture.
Media headline events, although they do offer only a limited and often
distorted view, such as the Enron incident, corporate executive “Golden
Parachutes,” the O.J. Case, Monica Lewinsky and Bill Clinton, and the
Iraq War without “Weapons of Mass Destruction” fiasco all indicate
that character, ethics, and integrity themselves seem to have at least
for awhile been hibernating within our American subconscious minds.
Whether or not these most extreme media events give an accurate representation,
character, ethics, and integrity still appear to have become something
of the recessive characteristic present in current American culture, and
this is something that I feel continues to have escalating major repercussions
on our country, our society, and young Americans in general.
Do our students even know what it means to be an ethical person of character
who lives according to a set of self-regulated ethical principles? And,
what’s worse, even if they do know what it means, do they really even
care? Do they really believe that the “Golden Rule” is “he who has
the gold makes the rule?” Do they really believe that “nice guys finish
last?” Do they believe that in order to “win” in America a person
has to break certain rules and lower certain ethical standards? Perhaps
some are just resigned to the fates they think they have. Perhaps some
just don’t believe that being a person of character “works” in “real
life.” Perhaps it is up to us as teachers and people of character to
rebuild what it means to have character, and also to help our students
to learn to believe in it again.
To teach our students to be people of character -- this is indeed a worthy
pursuit. A person of character is indeed powerful in that he or she avoids
many of life’s pitfalls which those without it remain susceptible. Also,
a person of integrity and character has a sense of civil and social responsibility.
Ethics, values, and principles are valuable tools and more than that, I
would argue, they are the very foundations for a workable, sane, and sustainable
society and civilization, and especially those societies and civilizations
that are as culturally, ethnically, and racially diverse as our American
one is presently.
Within a free society, which benefits from the freedoms and liberties that
we all share and enjoy in the United States, comes also a certain responsibility
and obligation to one another and to the children of our nation. The character,
integrity, and ethics of the individuals within the communities, institutions,
organizations, businesses, and governments within this country and within
all human communities are indeed something that affects us all.
Thus, as teacher and as a human being, I find it of utmost importance,
to not only be a person of integrity and character myself, but also to
develop within my students character, values, ethics, morals, and a way
of life that is not willing to sacrifice their own principles, integrity,
nor ethics for “success” - economic or otherwise. A person of character
recognizes the repercussions that his or her own actions have on other
people in the society, culture, and human community in general. It is my
conclusion that we must begin to recognize the trade-offs that occur when
we seek personal goals that occur at the expense of others and at the expense
of the whole. We must begin to realize that we can’t keep seeking the
“golden parachute” escape route because indeed we are one whole human
community ultimately living together on one world and in one global community.
We must, I feel, begin to realize that we can succeed and not bring harm
to the people in the society, culture, and human community. In fact, this
must become the new authentic definition of what it is “to succeed.”
We can succeed and actually do tremendous good for the people in our society,
culture, and human community. We must learn to see ourselves as “all
of us” and not solely as ourselves separate, or solely as members of
one particular group or another. We must learn that we can validate the
healthiest of our individual identities and still validate and serve the
whole simultaneously.
As an elementary school teacher for the past 4½ years, again, I see my
students even at this young of an age at the effect of our profit-driven
mega-American super-consumer culture. In such an environment, it seems
to me that some of those role models that stand for integrity, responsibility,
character, and ethics might just get lost or have a very difficult time
getting through and making the type of difference that we all really need
them to make.
However, within the relationship in between teacher and student, which
is often not an easy one for a teacher to cultivate nor maintain, but which
can be obtained, and because it can, it is my belief that a teacher can
make the type of difference that is needed for some students to learn and
develop this invaluable sense of character, integrity, and ethics.
Whether or not this is the case, or whether we are just weary travelers
lost in “a super-sized sh-t storm!” the education of our students with
integrity and principles based on character is something we as teachers
can choose to embrace in ourselves and in the education of our students
for all our sake because the character of each of our students is obviously
of vital importance to our society, our families, our communities, our
neighborhoods, our state, our country, and so on.
What this means to us as teachers is that we can incorporate simple ideas
about character into some aspect of learning intermingled with academics
each day. It means that we can choose to incorporate some practical and
simple lessons about community, responsibility, integrity, and ethical
decision making in some way, shape, or form into our classroom teaching
strategies each day. We can discover these character educational lesson
plans and ideas through our own personal online research or through our
professional development meetings with other teachers.
To be a teacher of character is fundamentally simply to be a person of
character when with our students, in how we relate to them, and in how
we conduct ourselves as teachers, and as people in general in our lives.
Do we ourselves treat our students with respect? Do we keep our word and
follow through with what we tell our students we will do? Do we model inner
peace, kindness, and manners with our students? Are we ourselves responsible
citizens who participate in our communities and in the communities around
the schools in which we teach? Do we facilitate community and a classroom
environment where our students feel safe to communicate and share with
one another? What decisions do we ourselves make when faced with the ongoing
ethical choices and even dilemmas that we all face? Do we live our lives
based upon certain moral or ethical principles that we alone require of
ourselves?
There are very few fast and easy ways, if any, to teach and develop character
in our students because authentic character itself is truly not a fast
or easy thing to develop. It very often takes much more than educating
our students with the knowledge of what it is, but it takes our being committed
that our students practice and develop it as we work with them throughout
the school year. It develops slowly over time, and it often can be something
that shows up most clearly in us and our students only when we are the
most tested. Being a person of character is not necessarily the path of
least resistance. It often can take much thought, commitment, and work
on our part and our student's part not only to make ethical choices, but
to follow through with them.
Also, the final determinant of and power for integrity, responsibility,
and character within each individual student, unless society is forced
to intervene due to an excess lack of these qualities, is the conscience
within that student. So, we as teachers perhaps can ultimately only, “show
the horse to water, but cannot make him drink" with regards to our students'
character. But we can motivate and inspire our students by virtue of our
own examples, and we can help them to become aware of their own integrity
or lack thereof through character education. And if we as teachers continue
to become increasingly aware of the vital importance of character education
and choose to commit to it, then a powerful ethical decision has been made
on our part and in that choice a significant difference will indeed be
made within our students. Ultimately, however, the power to choose and
commit to character development within ourselves and character education
for our students is in our hands.
In conclusion, character education is an invaluable aspect of education
that is now an expanding, developing, and growing aspect of public education
ripe with creative opportunities and challenges. It is also something that
we as teachers can ongoingly choose to develop in ourselves and integrate
into our teaching, along with a deep and profound love and respect for
ourselves for the tremendous service that doing so provides, for our student’s
sake, for our own sake, and for everyone’s sake. Please join me, won’t
you?
Comments on "On Character Education"
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On Tuesday, December 27, 2005, Mr King
(547) wrote:
Thank you each for looking at this with serious consideration... I am working on a character education project... Character education has been a hot topic developing in public education for 5-10 years...
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On Tuesday, December 27, 2005, Mr King
(547) wrote:
I aim on being a part of this movement... I have an elementary school in Los Angeles Unified that wants to be a pilot school for my character/empowerment/peace after-school education program...
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On Saturday, December 24, 2005, capt_funguy
(777) wrote:
this man is an almost accredited english teacher . he is a wanna be apostle for a nationwide character building project. he proposes using academics as a vehicle for his agenda.
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On Saturday, December 24, 2005, capt_funguy
(777) wrote:
he wants others to join him in his battle against biggie fries , tv , vanity ,excess , gov't , etc. .... until they do , he will continue this on his own , for his version of the greater good .
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On Saturday, December 24, 2005, capt_funguy
(777) wrote:
teachers must wage this war , because otherwise , no one will . there is no measure that i'm aware of to qualify an integrity guide... yet mr king feels qualified . phant's question is valid ...
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On Tuesday, December 27, 2005, Mr King
(547) wrote:
The only determinant of and power for integrity within each person (unless society is forced to intervene due to an excess lack of it) is the conscience within that person...
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On Saturday, December 24, 2005, capt_funguy
(777) wrote:
if my daughter came home with the word " power" written on the back of each hand , that wouldn't make me a cynic , it would make me a very concerned parent ...
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On Saturday, December 24, 2005, capt_funguy
(777) wrote:
and when he used the word " character " 35 times in his answer as to " why? "... that wouldn't be proof in itself that he had any.
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On Saturday, December 24, 2005, capt_funguy
(777) wrote:
mr king , i'm not attacking you , my kid is not in your class , so to me , it's just an exploration of ideas .... i hope you're qualified..... funguy
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On Saturday, December 24, 2005, stormtalk
(727) wrote:
What makes you think you have so much character that you're capable of teaching it?
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On Tuesday, December 27, 2005, Mr King
(547) wrote:
Being willing to teach it and to have the professional educational community accept and acknowledge me positively for my work... This I'd say is the test. LOVE&PEACE, Seth
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On Saturday, December 24, 2005, blue
(1409) wrote:
what makes you think he doesn't? cynicism is a detriment to true knowledge.. you'd do well to understand this simple fact. ~b
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On Saturday, December 24, 2005, stormtalk
(727) wrote:
I didn't say I believed either way; I was just asking a question. Why is cynicism a detriment to true knowledge? Also, what is true knowledge?