Center for Character & Citizenship

University of Missouri - St. Louis                  

                                                     

 

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Character and Academics: What Good Schools Do

 

Fostering Goodness: Teaching Parents to Facilitate Children’s Moral Development

 

Opponents or Enemies: Rethinking the Nature of Competition  

 

The Sport Behavior of Youth, Parents and Coaches: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
 

What Works in Character Education

 

Character and Academics: What Good Schools Do

By Jacques S. Benninga, Marvin W. Berkowitz, Phyllis Kuehn, and Karen Smith

 

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Despite the clear national interest in character education, many schools are leery of engaging in supplementary initiatives that, although worthy, might detract from what they see as their primary focus: increasing academic achievement.

 

Moreover, many schools lack the resources to create new curricular initiatives. Yet the enhancement of student character is a bipartisan mandate that derives from the very core of public education. The purpose of public schooling requires that schools seek to improve both academic and character education.
 

If it could be demonstrated that implementing character education programs is compatible with efforts to improve school achievement, then perhaps more schools would accept the challenge of doing both. But until now there has been little solid evidence of such successful coexistence.