1 / 29

Spirituality and Moral Character Development

Spirituality and Moral Character Development. William G. Huitt Valdosta State University. Last Revised: July 2003. Moral Character Development. Considered important for 1000s of years Recent revival of its importance Multiple definitions. Moral Character Defined.

Download Presentation

Spirituality and Moral Character Development

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Spirituality and Moral Character Development William G. Huitt Valdosta State University Last Revised: July 2003

  2. Moral Character Development • Considered important for 1000s of years • Recent revival of its importance • Multiple definitions

  3. Moral Character Defined • “. . . engaging in morally relevant conduct or words, or refraining from certain conduct or words” (Wynne & Walberg, 1984) • “. . . a complex set of relatively persistent qualities of the individual person, and generally has a positive connotation when used in discussions of moral education” (Pritchard, 1988)

  4. Moral Character Defined • “. . . an individual’s set of psychological characteristics that affect that person’s ability and inclination to function morally” (Berkowitz, 2002) • “Character implies moral character and a personality characterized by moral values and feelings (conscience), the ability to reason autonomously, sensitively, and fairly about moral issues (ethical reflection), and the habit of acting in a manner consistent with one’s moral thinking and moral feeling (virtue)” (Vessels, 1998)

  5. Character Is Who You Are I look inside myself to see What kind of person I want to be. I think and feel and choose And do the best that I can. In the dark or in the light It deals with doing the wrong and the right. I’ve got to know and do the right To be the best me.

  6. Character Is Who You Are Character is who you are Viewed from within or from afar. It’s the person you become And who you’re known to be. It’s what you practice everyday. It’s what you do not just what you say. To be a Brilliant Star Remember, character’s who you are.

  7. Character Is Who You Are I look inside myself to see What kind of person I want to be. I feel and think and choose And do the best that I can. In the dark or in the light It deals with doing the wrong and the right. I’ve got to know and do the right To be the best me.

  8. Character Is Who You Are Character is who you are Viewed from within or from afar. It’s the person you become And who you’re known to be. It’s what you practice everyday. It’s what you do not just what you say. Remember, to be a Brilliant Star Character’s who you are.

  9. Character Is Who You Are Character is who you are Viewed from within and from afar It’s the person who you become And who you’re known to be. It’s what you practice everyday. It’s what you do not just what you say. To be a Brilliant Star Remember, character’s who you are.

  10. Model of Moral Character Moral Identity

  11. Spirituality • Fundamental to many conceptualizations of human beings • Mind (Thinking, Feeling, Committing) • Body • Spirit • Spirituality is considered inherent quality of human beings • Naturalism • Pantheism • Theism

  12. Spirituality Defined • Attempt to understand and connect to the unknowns of the universe or search for meaningfulness in one’s life (Adler, 1932/1980; Frankl, 1959) • A relationship with the sacred (Beck & Walters, 1977) • An individual's experience of and relationship with a fundamental, nonmaterial aspect of the universe (Tolan, 2002)

  13. Spirituality Defined • The exploration of the meaningfulness of our lives and our relationships to ourselves, to others, to nature, or to a higher power (Hamilton & Jackson,1998; Hay & Nye, 1998) • Does not necessarily require a belief in God, Great Spirit, Supreme Creator, etc., but does not exclude it

  14. Spirituality Defined • Spirituality not equated with religion • Religion refers to organized, institutionalized set of beliefs, teachings, and practices established to connect groups of individuals to a particular expression of spirituality • Can be spiritual without being religious and vice versa

  15. Spiritual Development • In summary, spirituality addresses such questions as: • How can we increase meaning in our lives, in general, and my life, in particular? • Who are we as human beings? Where did we come from? How are we related? • Are we in control of our lives or is our destination a result of fate?

  16. Spiritual Development • In summary, spirituality addresses such questions as: • Where did the universe come from? What are its origins? • Is there a God (in whatever way we define or know a Supreme Being)? • What is our relationship to God or the Creator, if there is one? • Is there a continuity of life after this life? If so, what is it like?

  17. Relational Consciousness • Relational consciousness may describe the essence of spirituality (Hay & Nye, 1998) • A type of metacognitive activity that describes ever increasing consciousness of growth and opportunity consequences for the individual.

  18. Relational Consciousness • Development is considered moving from • simple to complex • naïve to sophisticated • insecurity to confidence

  19. Relational Consciousness • Described in terms of the relational aspects of • self • others • nature • universal unknowns (including or excluding God or Creator)

  20. Spirituality & Moral Character • Relational consciousness as the basis for moral character • Three categories of spiritual sensitivity • awareness-sensing (flow, focus) • mystery-sensing (wonder, awe, imagination) • value-sensing (ultimate meaning & identity)

  21. Spirituality & Moral Character • RC theory explicitly states • a cognitive/thinking factor • an affective/emotional factor • a social factor • a transcendent factor • RC theory implicitly states • a conative/volitional factor • a behavioral factor

  22. Model of Moral Character Moral Identity

  23. Ecology of Development

  24. Impacting Moral Character • Work to establish affirming, secure environment among family, school, and other institutions • Develop explicit curriculum that focuses on virtues, moral principles, and social skills • moral thinking (knowledge base & processes) • valuing • committing • behaving

  25. Vessel’s Curriculum • Personal Integrity • Kindness (knowing how others feel; making others feel better) • Courage (being strong enough to do right when afraid to do so) • Ability (having skills to figure out what is right and wrong and behave accordingly) • Effort (striving for excellence; perseverance)

  26. Vessel’s Curriculum • Social Integrity • Friendship (making and maintaining friends; treating others as you want to be treated) • Teamwork (helping to achieve group goals; working well with others) • Citizenship (following rules and laws; trying to make self and community better)

  27. Example

  28. Gardner’s Intelligences • Verbal/Linguistic • Logical/Mathematical • Visual/Spatial • Bodily/Kinesthetic • Musical/Rhythmic • Interpersonal • Intrapersonal • Naturalist Intelligence

  29. References • Adler, A. (1932/1980). What life should mean to you. London: George Allen & Unwin. • Beck, P., & Walters, A. (1977). The sacred: Ways of knowledge, sources of life. Tsaile, AZ: Navajo Community College. • Berkowitz, M. (2002). The science of character education. In W. Damon (Ed.), Bringing in a new era in character education (43-63). Stanford, CA: Hoover Institute Press. • Frankl, V (1959). Man's search for meaning. New York: Praeger. • Hamilton, D., and Jackson, M. (1998). Spiritual development: Paths and processes. Journal of Instructional Psychology, 25(4), 262-270. • Hay, D., with Nye, R. (1998). The spirit of the child. London: Fount. • Pritchard, I. (1988). Character education: Research prospects and problems. American Journal of Education, 96(4), 469-495. • Tolan, S. (202). Spirituality and the highly gifted adolescent. Charlotte, NC: Author. Retrieved July 2002, from http://www.stephanietolan.com/spirituality.htm • Vessels, G. (1998). Character and community development: A school planning and teacher training handbook. Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers. (see http://www.characterthroughthearts.org/main.html) • Wynne, E., & Walberg, H. (Eds.). (1984). Developing character: Transmitting knowledge. Posen, IL: ARL.

More Related