5. While we may be producing a
smart, self-assured generation of
young people, today’s kids are
also the most self-centered and
stressed-out on record.
16. REALITY CHECK: Teens are now
40 percent lower in empathy levels
than three decades ago, and in the
same period, narcissism has
increased 58 percent.
71. If we really want our children
become caring people we must show
them ways to respond to another’s
concerns, distress, frustrations or
sorrow. It’s our best tactic to keep
their empathy capacities open, and
avoid the infamous Empathy Gap.
72. A great man shows his
greatness by the way he
treats little men.
Thomas Carlyle
73. CCFA Principles
• Every Teacher is a Character Formator
• Not just another subject
• Education is not just covering curriculum
• No other better way to teach character than through the power
of our example
• The teacher is the most important teaching tool
• The school is only as good as its teachers.
81. 81
THE DAILY FOUR
1. Share good news (with a partner; 1 min
each).
2. Tell about someone or something you’re
grateful for (new partner; 1 min. each).
3. Affirm someone in the class.
4. Make us laugh. (Joke must be clean.)
—Hal Urban, Lessons from the Classroom: 20
Things Good Teachers Do
(www.halurban.com)
82. Comprehensive Character Education
BIG IDEA #1:
A high-quality, comprehensive
approach to character education is
the most effective way to develop
caring classrooms and schools—
and thereby reduce bullying.
83.
84. The 12-point comprehensive approach to
character education. . .
. . . is intentional, deliberately seeking
to positively impact character
development through every phase of
school and classroom life.
85. School Climate Matters
Bullying is strongly related to overall school climate.
Bullying decreases when:
school climate improves
students have greater voice and responsibility for
solving problems and making decisions that improve
their school.
—Dr. Maurice Elias, Rutgers University (based on a study of more than 100
schools)
86. What Commercially Available
Bullying Prevention Programs
Work?
Educational Leadership (9/2011):
A meta-analysis of 44 bullying prevention
programs found that fewer than half (19) were
effective.
Vreeman & Carrroll analysis (2007):
Classroom curricula alone did not reduce bullying.
87. Programs found to be effective . . .
1. Work to create a school
climate where bullying is
socially unacceptable
2. Enlist the support of the
community
3. Increase supervision of
playground and other areas
88. Programs found to be effective . . .
4. Institute firm sanctions for
bullying
5. Use ongoing messages to
help students recognize
aggression and support and
stick up for victims.
90. Olweus Bullying Prevention
Study of 18,000 students, elementary-H.S.
After 2 years of implementation, there was:
22% reduction in student reports of being
verbally bullied
23% reduction in reports of being
physically bullied.
91. The challenge:
How to reduce the nearly 80% of the bullying
that remains even after implementing a state-
of-the-art bullying prevention program such as
Olweus?
92. Answer:
A comprehensive character education
program that not only seeks to suppress the
negative behavior of bullying but also to
promote its psychological opposites:
virtues of respect, cooperation,
and kindness.
94. 94
BIG IDEA #2:
Any virtue, and character as a
whole, has 3 parts:
Knowing (habits of the mind)
Feeling (habits of the heart)
Behavior (habits of behavior)
95. 95
Good Character:
You have to . . .
know it in your head
feel it in your heart
show it with your hands.
96. Kindness makes a fellow
feel good whether it’s
being done to him or by
him.
Frank A. Clark
97. Young people develop character by what
they see, what they hear, and what they
are repeatedly led to do.
Directed practice is the most important
part.
—James Stenson, Compass: A Handbook of Parent
Leadership
98. 98
BIG IDEA #3:
Students need MORAL
VIRTUES to become good
and behave ethically.
They need PERFORMANCE
VIRTUES to become smart
and do their best work.
101. SMART & GOOD SCHOOLS INITIATIVE
Performance Character
• Commitment to
continuous improvement
• Goal setting
• Work ethic
• Determination
• Self-confidence
• Initiative
• Creativity
Moral/Ethical Character
• Respect
• Responsibility to others
• Compassion
• Humility
• Integrity
• Justice
• Moral courage
102. SMART & GOOD SCHOOLS INITIATIVE
The Interdependence of Performance
Character and Moral Character
•Without moral character, we
may resort to unethical means
(lying, cheating, stealing, even
killing) to achieve our
performance goals.
103. SMART & GOOD SCHOOLS INITIATIVE
The Interdependence of Performance
Character and Moral Character
Without performance character, we will
have difficulty developing our human
potential and enacting our moral values
effectively.
104. The Mission of Every School:
To develop performance
character and moral character—
best work and best behavior—
through an ethical learning
community.
105. SMART & GOOD SCHOOLS INITIATIVE
What is character education?
• The deliberate effort
• to develop moral and performance
virtues
• through every phase of school and
classroom life.
108. Children remind me of chickens, seeking out the
weak and wounded and pecking them to death.
They have discovered that my 9-year-old son,
who is autistic, is bothered by loud noises, and
they scream and whistle in his ear until he cries.
—A mother
113. Suicide and Bullying
Each year, 14% of U.S. high school students
seriously consider suicide.
Victims and perpetrators of bullying are both at
higher risk of depression and suicide.
The effects of chronic bullying can persist into
adulthood.
114. U.S. Secret Service Study:
Two-thirds of the student shooters had
been bullied by fellow students.
115. The Societal Costs of Bullying
By adulthood, 60% of school
bullies will have a criminal
conviction.
116. The Educational Costs of Bullying
Peer exclusion in kindergarten is
associated with lower academic
achievement in later grades.
Even observing someone else being
bullied can lower a student’s
academic performance.
117. You can accomplish by
kindness what you
cannot by force.
Publilius Syrus
118. PROMOTING AUTHENTIC RESPECT
“We uphold standards of behavior which
honor the dignity and worth of all
individuals regardless of gender,
ethnicity, race, age, physical or mental
abilities, religious beliefs, sexual
orientation, or socioeconomic
background.”
122. Develop a school touchstone or
“way.”
Written by staff and students
together, the touchstone
expresses the school’s core
moral and performance values.
123. THE NORTHRIDGE WAY
At Northridge School, we pursue
excellence in scholarship and character.
We celebrate and honor each other by
being respectful, honest,
kind, and fair.
We give our best inside and
outside the classroom.
This is who we are, even when
no one is watching.
125. THE ROOSEVELT WAY
“There’s a way that students here
are expected to act, and a way
that they expected not to act.”
—High School Counselor
126. Self-Study: Touchstone Implementation
Visibility
The touchstone is displayed in all
classrooms and included in all school
documents.
Academics
Teachers make connections with the
touchstone when teaching their subject
area.
128. Ongoing Professional Development
Regular staff sharing of best practices (through
buddy system, faculty and dept. meetings, etc.)
Staff training in cooperative learning, class
meetings, and other key strategies
150. 20 Kinds of Class Meetings
16. Planning meeting
17. Concept meeting
18. Sticky situations
19. Suggestion box/class business box
20. Meeting on meetings
151. Student Voice and Cyberbullying
Challenge student gov’t: “What can
students, parents, and the school,
working together, do to prevent
cyberbullying?”
Have schoolwide discussion, with delegates
from each classroom.
Ask students to take responsibility for a
schoolwide campaign.
Resource: www.stopcyberbullying.org
152. Get students to take responsibility:
Counselors create anti-bullying
“intervention teams” at each grade level.
(Team members step in when they see
someone being picked on.)
Students provide emotional support to
victims.
154. The smallest act of kindness
is worth more than the
greatest intention.
Kahlil Gibran
155. FRESHMAN TRANSITION PROGRAM
Older students are assigned as mentors to all
freshmen.
The school trains the mentors.
Mentors and their freshmen meet weekly.
156. BUDDY CLASSES
An older class is paired with a younger
class.
The buddy classes get together weekly or
bi-weekly.
The older kids read to their little buddies,
help them with their schoolwork, do a
special project together, and so on.
163. “Build a Strong Home-School
Partnership”
Ch. 3, Character Matters, p. 60
How to get parents involved
164. Communicate to Parents
1. “Parents are the first and most
important character educators.”
2. “The school’s job is to reinforce
the character virtues being
taught at home.”
169. Character Education Homework
Parent and child, independently,
each make a list:
“Who are 5 of your heroes? Why?”
Then compare and discuss lists.
170.
171. Component #1 (inner wheel)
The teacher as:
1. caregiver (building bonds)
2. model
3. mentor (moral and spiritual
guide/coach)
173. Research on Resilience
Resilient kids possess 4 strengths:
1. Social competence
2. Problem-solving skills
3. A sense of identity
4. Hope for the future.
They often cite a “special teacher” who
was a confidant and an inspiring role
model.
174. Kind words can be short
and easy to speak but their
echoes are truly endless.
Mother Teresa
175. 175
The Difference a Teacher Makes
“I was a bully before I came to this
school. I used to make little kids cry.
“When I met Mrs. Brown, I changed.
I’m not a bully anymore, because
Mrs. Brown taught me about
character.”
—a 6th-grade boy
177. Never lose a chance of
saying a kind word.
William Makepeace Thackeray
178. 178
Handshake at the Door
“In the second it takes me to shake a
hand, I renew my relationship with
that student.”
“I can tell in a heartbeat what kind of
a day a kid is having. You can nip
problems in the bud at the door.”
179. 179
Teacher’s Corner
1. In my Teacher’s Corner, I display pictures
of my husband, children, and dog; photos
of classes I taught when I lived in
California; my college diploma; favorite
books; sports I enjoy; and other things
that reflect my interests.
180. 180
Teacher’s Corner
2. During the first few weeks, I meet with
each of my kids in the Teachers Corner
for about 10 minutes. They bring an “All
About Me” book they’ve made. These
conversations have given me a closer
relationship with each child.
182. 182
Teacher as Model: Self-Inventory
1. Do I warmly greet each student?
2. Do I seek other opportunities to connect with
each student?
3. Am I well-prepared for class? On time?
4. Do I model patience and courtesy, even
under stress?
5. Do I treat my all students impartially?
6. Do I challenge all of them to do their best
work?
183.
184. Component #2
A caring classroom community
1. Students know each other.
2. Students affirm and care about
each other.
3. Every student feels like a valued
member of the group.
185. Seat Lottery
Janet Fagal, 5th-grade teacher:
1. Struggled with cliques.
2. She arranged desks in a “U” and
gave each a number.
3. At the end of the week, students
drew a number—their new desk for
the next week. It changed the social
chemistry of the class.
186. 186
Anonymous Compliments
1. Each student draws the name of a classmate.
2. By the week’s end, the student writes an
anonymous compliment about that person on a
strip of paper, shows it to the teacher, and puts
it in the Compliment Box.
3. On Friday, the teacher posts all the
compliments on the bulletin board.
187. PEERS AFFIRMING PEERS
At the end of the day:
“Who saw kindness today?”
“Who saw respect?”
“Who saw determination?”
“Who saw sharing?”
—Jenna Smith, 3rd-grade teacher
188. Practice Kindness
At the start of the day, all students take out
their Good Deeds Journal and write:
1. A good deed I did yesterday . . .
2. A good deed I will do today . . .
In all subjects, teachers make a connection to
the good deeds theme.
191. 191
Character-Based Discipline
Promotes positive behavior and good
character
Deters and corrects negative behavior
3 essentials:
1. High expectations
2. Clear rules
3. Clear consequences.
192. Teaching Courtesy
I teach my kids to greet and thank the cafeteria
workers.
The cafeteria staff say they always know when my
kids are coming through.
My students have a very high level of self-respect—
because of the respect they show to other people.
—Molly Angelini, 5th-grade teacher
193. 193
The Compact for Excellence
1. Put students in groups of 4. Give each a large sheet
of paper and marker.
2. “Write down 2 rules that will help us DO OUR BEST
WORK and 2 rules that will help us TREAT OTHERS
WITH RESPECT AND CARE.”
3. Guide the class in combining the ideas into one
Compact.
194. SMART & GOOD SCHOOLS INITIATIVE
194
Sample Compact for Excellence
To Help Everyone Feel Respected and Cared About, We
Will:
1. Treat others the way we want to be treated.
2. Think before we act.
3. Apologize when we do something hurtful.
To Help Everyone Do Their Best Work, We Will:
1. Never settle for less than our best.
2. Ask for help when we need it.
3. Have a positive attitude (bounce back).
195. SMART & GOOD SCHOOLS INITIATIVE
195
Behavior contracts have proved
helpful with kids who bully.
“I will not hit or hurt anyone. If I do, I will
have to call my parents and report what I
did.”
196. 196
Have Kids Make Up for What
They Did (Restitution):
“If a student calls someone a
name, or is unkind in any other
way, I ask that child to write a
sincere letter of apology to the
person he or she has offended.”
200. CLASS MEETINGS
1. involve students in shared decision
making that gives them responsibility for
making the classroom the best it can be.
2. a face-to-face, interactive circle
discussion
3. can deal with problems (cutting in lunch
line, put-downs, homework issues) or
help to plan upcoming events (the day, a
field trip, a cooperative activity, the next
unit).
201. Weekly H.S. Class Meetings
“Weekly class meetings are important for
discussing and role-playing what bystanders can
do.”
Resource: Class Meetings That Matter
—Olweus program (www.olweus.org)
202. 202
Use class meetings to discuss bullying:
“Give examples of bullying, but no names please.”
“How do you feel when someone does these things
to you?”
205. Study Your Hero; Become Your Hero
Give a report to the class:
1. Why did you choose this person as
your hero?
2. How are you like your hero? Not like
your hero?
3. What, specifically, are you doing to
try to become more like your hero?
4. Report on your progress in 2 months.
206. SMART & GOOD SCHOOLS INITIATIVE
REFLECTING ON CHARACTER
1. What would you want a teacher to say about your
character in a letter of reference?
2. How do you gain the trust of another person? How
do you destroy it?
3. What are some of the consequences of being
dishonest?
4. What are some of the rewards of being honest?
207. Practice Goal-Setting
At the end of the day, students take out their
Character Record Book and answer 3
questions:
1. How did I show kindness* today?
2. How did I not show kindness?
3. How will I show kindness tomorrow?
* The focus virtue changes weekly.
208.
209.
210.
211. Empathetic Children Can
Recognize Feelings
1st Habit: Teaching emotional literacy to help
students recognize and understand the
feelings and needs of others
212. Be pitiful, for every
man is fighting a
hard battle.
Ian Maclaren
213.
214. Empathetic Children Have a
“Moral Identity”
2nd Habit: Developing an ethical code so
students will adopt caring values that guide
their integrity and activity empathy to help
others
215.
216. Empathetic Children Understand
the Needs of Others
3rd Habit: Instilling perspective taking so students
can step into others’ shoes to understand another’s
feelings, thoughts and views
219. Empathetic Children Have A
“Moral Imagination”
4th Habit: Instilling a moral imagination so students
can use literature, films and emotionally- charged
imaged as a source of inspiration to feel with others
220.
221. Empathetic Children Can Keep
Their Cool
5th Habit: Mastering self-regulation to help
students learn to manage strong emotions and
reduce personal distress so they can help
others
222. A single sunbeam is
enough to drive away
many shadows.
Francis of Assis
226. Empathetic Kids Think “Us” Not
“Them”
7th Habit: Cultivating collaboration to active
empathy and help students work with others
to achieve shared goals for the benefit of all
229. Empathetic Kids Stick Their Necks
Out
8th Habit: Promoting moral courage to
embolden kids to speak out, step in and help
others
230.
231. Empathetic Kids Want to Make a
Difference
9th Habit: Cultivating altruistic leadership
abilities to motivate students to make a
difference for others, no matter how small it
may be, and become Changemakers
232. Kind words do not cost
much. Yet they
accomplish much.
Blaise Pascal
233.
234. 8 CONCRETE STRATEGIES THAT
HELP RAISE CARING CHILDREN
UnSelfie: Why Empathetic Kids Succeed In
Our All- About-Me World
236. A simple way to increase face
to face connection is to enforce
one habit: “Always look at the
color of the talker’s eyes.”
237. Beginning today, treat everyone you
meet as if they were going to be
dead by midnight. Extend to them all
the care, kindness and understanding
you can muster, and do it with no
thought of any reward. Your life will
never be the same again.
Og Mandino
241. A study found that praising children’s
character traits rather than their behavior
helped them internalize caring as part of their
identities. The character-praised kids were
also more likely to be more generous than
those children who were told that they had
donated because they were expected to do.
246. Help stretch your child’s
perspective-taking skills (the
cognitive part of empathy)
using spontaneous everyday
moments.
247. In books: “Take the bears’ side. How would
you feel if Goldilocks used your beds and
chairs without asking?”
248. In the news: “The cyclone destroyed most of
those children’s homes. What do you think
those kids are feeling and thinking? What do
you think we can do to help?”
249. In your family: “How does Dad feel hearing
that his mom is so sick?” Don’t overlook
asking: “I wonder if there’s a way we can
help?”
251. One of the greatest questions to ask yourself
each day is: “If I were the only example my
child had to learn kindness and empathy, what
did she learn today?”
253. So instead of always asking, “What did you
learn today?” or “What grade did you get?”
include:
254. “What’s something you did
that was kind?”
“What kind thing did you see
someone do?”
255. “… children are hard-wired
to care, but their capacity
for empathy must be
nurtured …”
256. Three things in human life
are important. The first is to
be kind. The second is to be
kind. And the third is to be
kind.
Henry James
257.
258.
259. 1. Set clear rules.
2. Teach how to recognize bullying.
3. Teach how to report bullying.
4. Teach how to respond to bullying.
5. Teach how to refuse bullying.
6. Replace current beliefs or
behavior.
The Essential 6
Rs
260. “Any failure to treat bullying,
abuse and violence seriously,
because it occurs between
students, within schools, is a
violation of a child’s human
rights.”
261.
262.
263. Social banter
Hurtful teasing
Mean, subtle body language
Aggressive physical behaviors, e.g. pushing, shoving,
kicking
Malicious gossip, e.g. online bullying, chat rooms
Sexual, gender, racist, religious harassment
Social exclusion – in person, electronic
Mobbing
Hazing
Extortion/bribery
Phone, cyber abuse
Damage to property
Physical violence
Use of weapons
Criminal act
Murder
271. Research Showed:
1. Good schools ensure a clean and secure
physical environment.
2. Good schools promote and model
fairness, equity, caring and respect.
3. In good schools, students contribute in
meaningful ways.
4. Good schools promote a caring
community and positive social relationships.