|
||||||||||||||||
|
HOW TO BE
(If you wish to copy or use any material from this website, please click here for Terms of Use.) |
If your school or organization does not have these videos, you can purchase them from Live Wire Media, or request them from your local library.
|
|||||||||||||||
|
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
If you are using the video, ask the first three questions before viewing. 1. What does it mean when someone is described as a "responsible" person?
3. Are there some reasons why you might want to be considered a "responsible" person? 4. Why did Rhonda beg her friends to let her work on the science project? 5. Why did Rhonda's friends hesitate to give her an important responsibility? 6. Rhonda's friends took a chance when they trusted her. Would you have done the same? Why, or why not? 7. Why do you think Rhonda decided to stay home and do her work instead of going to Disneyland? 8. How would the play have ended if Rhonda had decided to go to Disneyland? 9. What are the rewards for being a responsible person?
11. Did the kids in the discussion part of the program say anything that you strongly agree with or disagree with? 12. What did you learn from this video program? (If you wish to copy or use any material from this website, please click here for Terms of Use.) |
||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||
|
1. Write the six responsible behaviors (see "How To Be A Responsible Person" at the top of this column) on the board, or make copies and hand them out. Have the children think of a few examples for each behavior. Then, for each example, have them brainstorm ways of handling irresponsible people. List the best ideas on the board.
3. Design a "Being Responsible" poster illustrating the six responsible behaviors. Put it up on your classroom wall. 4. Have a discussion about classroom responsibility. What are the kids' responsibilities, and what are the teacher's responsibilities? Make a chart of these responsibilities on the board. What are the consequences of being irresponsible? What are the rewards of being responsible? (If you wish to copy or use any material from this website, please click here for Terms of Use.) |
||||||||||||||||
Other teaching guides in this series:
|
||||||||||||||||
|
WRITING ASSIGNMENTS
1. How responsible are you? For each of the six responsible behaviors listed at the top of this column, rate yourself on a scale of one to five (1=awful, and 5=terrific). For each of these behaviors give an example of how you are either responsible or irresponsible, and what you could do to improve. 2. Write about a time when you did something really responsible. Describe it. What was the outcome? How did it make you feel about yourself? Describe a time you did something really irresponsible. What was the outcome? How did it make you feel about yourself?
4. Write about the kinds of responsibilities you feel for (or to): 5. Write about the differences between adult responsibilities and children's responsibilities. What does responsibility have to do with growing up? What responsibilities do you look forward to? (If you wish to copy or use any material from this website, please click here for Terms of Use.) |
||||||||||||||||
|
HOME ASSIGNMENTS To enlist the involvement of parents, make copies of the "For Parents" block (see below) and send them home with the children. Tell the children to discuss the video with their parents, and to perform the following activities. 1. Have a discussion about responsibility in the family. What are your responsibilities (other than chores), and what are your parents' responsibilities? Make a chart of these responsibilities and put it up on your bedroom wall (or, perhaps, the refrigerator door). What happens if you are irresponsible? What if your parents are irresponsible? What are the rewards for being responsible?
3. Talk with your family about what things you can do together to take responsibility for the environment (recycling, using less water and energy, buying non-polluting products, etc.). Make a plan and do it. Report on your plan in class. 4. For one week keep a daily record of all your responsibilities. Include social commitments, homework, household chores, everything. At the end of the week give yourself a grade on how well you did in carrying out your responsibilities.
(If you wish to copy or use any material from this website, please click here for Terms of Use.) |
(Copy this block and send it home to the parents.) FOR PARENTS Dear Parent, Your child is involved in learning-activities designed to develop good character and empower young people to make good choices for themselves. He or she may be asked to complete several tasks at home. Your cooperation with these activities will support our overall program. The current lesson is about responsibility. We have shown a video entitled "Being Responsible," which presents a skit and discussion about the personal benefits of making responsible choices. Please ask your child to tell you about this video program and what he or she learned from it. Here are some things you can do to support the idea that being a responsible person makes us feel good about ourselves and makes other people respect and appreciate us. Talk with your children about responsibility. Tell them that responsibility isn't just doing chores, it's following through on commitments, answering for their own actions, being reliable and trustworthy, using good judgment, taking care of their own affairs, and not procrastinating. Let them know that these are signs they are growing up and can be trusted with greater freedom. "Catch" your children making a responsible choice or behaving in a responsible manner. Tell them how much that means to you. Try to "forget" past failures at being responsible.
|
|||||||||||||||
TERMS OF USE © Copyright Elkind+Sweet Communications, Inc. All rights are reserved. The material in this website is intended for non-commercial educational use. If you wish to copy or use any of this material, please click here for "Terms of Use." Except as provided in "Terms of Use," this material is for private use only and may not be republished or copied without written permission of the publisher. |
||||||||||||||||
Home • High School Teaching Guides • Middle School Teaching Guides • Elementary School Teaching Guides • Service Learning
Character in Sports • Opportunities for Action • Great Web Resources • School to Work • How-To Articles • Character Ed Organizations
Live Wire Media • 273 Ninth Street • San Francisco, CA 94103 • 415-564-9500