Literaturnachweis - Detailanzeige
Autor/in | Mulcahy, Mary |
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Titel | A Child's World of Values. |
Quelle | (1979), (20 Seiten) |
Beigaben | Tabellen |
Sprache | englisch |
Dokumenttyp | gedruckt; Monographie |
Schlagwörter | Tagungsbericht; Stellungnahme; Authoritarianism; Childhood Needs; Children; Ethical Instruction; Family School Relationship; Interpersonal Relationship; Moral Values; Parent Role; Permissive Environment; Teacher Role Autoritarismus; Childhood; needs; Kindheit; Bedürfnis; Child; Kind; Kinder; Ethics instruction; Teaching of ethics; Ethikunterricht; Interpersonal relation; Interpersonal relations; Interpersonelle Beziehung; Zwischenmenschliche Beziehung; Moral value; Ethischer Wert; Parental role; Elternrolle; Lehrerrolle |
Abstract | Children need to share their personal lives with other persons in a relationship of mutual respect and responsiveness; i.e., in a relationship of love. Children are an end, not a means, people to be valued for their own sakes. Adults must help children to know who they are and who they can become. Values contribute to the fulfillment of a person's needs. In the value crisis that exists today, parents and teachers are confused and some of them have begun to doubt time honored principles and their application. Areas of confusion include the authoritarianism versus permissivism dilemma, the problem of the relationship between values and morals, the absence of objective criteria for evaluating what is good and bad in human actions, and the prevalence of relativist morality. Values are taught at school whether directly or indirectly. The intention of programs in values education is to help teachers and pupils examine the values being communicated by the school, by agencies like television, radio, and other community groups, and to arrive at reasoned, open processes for clarifying and improving value judgments. A child develops values: (1) through the relationship with teachers and other pupils, (2) through subject matter, and (3) through techniques and strategies such as values clarification, kits for teaching moral values through behavior modification, transactional analysis, etc. Home and school form a partnership in helping a child develop values. Mutual respect and understanding, communication and dialogue are essential elements of this partnership. (JMB) |
Erfasst von | ERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC |
Update | 2004/1/01 |