The Importance
of Teaching Values in School Part 1 of V
By Jill
Jenkins
With Isis
recruiting our teenagers who are attracted by violence and religious extremists, with
elected officials arrested for dishonest acts, with news of the corruption on
Wall Street, teaching values to our children seems more important than in any
other time in history. Students are being enticed by the lure of drugs and
gangs. Violence in our streets is more
often committed by adolescents than any other age groups. Yet many schools have abandoned value
instruction for skill-based education.
Nazi Germany’s leaders were well-educated scientists and mathematicians,
but it didn’t stop them from murdering seven million Jews, homosexuals,
gypsies, and those who disagreed with their dogma. They
burned books and controlled what type of education students received. Today, students are reading only excerpts
from selected novels and non-fiction focusing on reading skills. Is this a healthy? Shouldn’t students be encouraged to ask
question and use literature to explore the human condition? Since the purpose
of education should
be to prepare them for a productive, healthy future, can we
actually do with if we ignore the importance of ethical behavior?
I recently read an article about why we should
not be addressing the topic of “Love” in school. This article postulates the theory that love
is too closely connected to religious beliefs; as a result, it is better discussed in the
home instead of in an academic arena.
On the contrary, learning about the human experience is fundamental to
any student’s educational experience.
The new Common Core Curriculum emphasizes non-fiction reading, but it
does not preclude the teaching of literature in all its genres. It includes them. Many publishers have reduced this instruction
to careful analysis of excerpts from literature, Close Reading. Although this increases acquisition of
reading skills, it lacks what Janet Allen refers to as being “memorable andmeaningful.” Students are naturally
curious about the nature of human relationship, so this is a perfect time to
use that interest to motivate them to increase their reading skills by
selecting novels with complex sentence patterns, intertwining plots, and
complicated characters while learning about human nature. Furthermore, most people establish their
life-long marital relationships during their “twenties.” That relationship not only builds financial
stability, but emotional security and happiness. A bad love relationship can be detrimental to
the individual’s financial security, emotional stability, and can result in
physical abuse, great unhappiness and sometimes death; therefore, helping
students understand relationship may be the most important role schools can
play in preparing students for their futures.
Conflicts
do happen and students need to have skills solving them in a productive manner. Using literature as models of problem solving
is excellent. For example, To
Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee provides readers with the
character, Atticus Finch who represents Tom Robinson, a black man unjustly
accused of raping a white woman. Despite
mod cries and unjustified attacks on his children, Atticus remains calm and
resolute in solving problems with legal action.
In The
Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd, Lilly Owen, a fourteen year
old girl, is given sanctuary from an abusive father who she believes killed her
mother by the Boatwright sisters with her caregiver and only friend,
Rosaleen. The story depicts healthy
human relationships even when they are from different racial groups. When her father ascertains the whereabouts of his daughter and demands her return, the situation is resolved in a caring and rational manner. Even better is to give students first-hand
knowledge about solving their own problems by using conflict resolution.
As a
society, we have a moral obligation to help students develop life skills that
include ethical behavior, understanding the nature of human relationships,
communication skills, and a solid set of values. This is too important to pretend the home can
do this. Students spend a great deal of
their time at school interacting with peers and teachers. As they grow older these relationships play a
greater role in molding who they become as adults. Therefore, it is imperative that we create a
balance of learning skills and life skills.
Selecting literature and nonfiction that reflect important values is
paramount. Giving students opportunity
to analyze and discuss these pieces is equally important. Furthermore, insisting
that teachers treat each other and the faculty and staff with kindness,
dignity, and respect is the most important.
Students learn by models and imitation.
It is important teachers and staff to treat each other and their
students with kindness, dignity and respect.
In the upcoming editions, I will explore four different literary selections that might be useful with some activities that increase student's ability to behave as ethical. productive members of society.
In the upcoming editions, I will explore four different literary selections that might be useful with some activities that increase student's ability to behave as ethical. productive members of society.