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MindOH! Character Education Lesson Plans

The MindOH! Discipline and Life Skills Series includes access to approximately 100 character education lesson plans. All of the lesson plans are organized by character trait. Some plans have multiple parts that can be used over a number of class periods or over a few days.

You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view the lesson plans. If you do not have it installed, you can download the free version of the Adobe software.

Caring

  • Why Should I Care?: When students support one another in being their personal best, everyone wins. With this classroom experience, students examine their personal strengths and weaknesses and then gain a better understanding that showing appreciation brings out the best in people.

  • You Rule!: Rules of courtesy are meant to avoid hurt feelings and misunderstandings. Using a worksheet as a springboard, students have an opportunity to discuss specific courteous behaviors and how those behaviors not only are caring and respectful, but can help them succeed.

  • Cheap Laughs: Bullying and teasing frequently involve getting a laugh at the expense of someone’s feelings. Help students understand the difference between laughing at someone and laughing with someone. This lesson plan includes an activity sheet that provides students with an opportunity to compare and contrast "laughing at" and "laughing with."

  • Let It Rip! (2 parts): Bullying and teasing negatively impact your entire school climate. Conversely, caring behaviors foster a more caring environment. With this lesson plan, small groups of students discuss the ripple effect of their actions and then create a skit demonstrating how unkind acts, as well as random acts of kindness, ripple out into the world.

  • Love And Hate: This lesson plan guides students through an exploration of two very powerful emotions: love and hate. They are asked to record examples of love and hate based on either historical or current events and then contrast the effect of these two emotions in our homes, schools, communities, and nations.

  • I Hate You: Most of us, in a moment of anger, have said these ugly words: “I hate you!” This classroom experience allows students to understand that people usually dislike the actions of others, not the people themselves. Small groups discuss what hatred is, where it comes from, and how to understand this powerful emotion so they can avoid unnecessary conflicts.

Citizenship

  • Helping Hands: This lesson plan helps students understand that being a truly successful person isn’t about who has the most money or the coolest shoes or the most friends. Part of being a successful person is learning to move beyond a self-centered lifestyle and identifying ways of making a difference in the lives of others. Students explore the concept of meaningful success and how it applies to good citizenship.

  • Help Anyone?: John F. Kennedy said, "Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country." Too often we’re concerned with what we can get and not what we can give. With this lesson plan, students explore the idea that volunteerism (at home, at school or in the community) plays a vital role in keeping our nation safe, free, and prosperous.

  • Gratitude Attitude: For our democratic system of government to thrive, we need an educated citizenry. With this lesson plan, students explore the benefits of living in a democratic society where public education is the right and privilege of all. Students are reminded that people risk their lives every day trying to come to America so their children can receive the same education they are receiving.

  • Coming To America: Every year hundreds of thousands of people leave their native homes, their extended families, and their native lands to come to America. With this lesson plan, students gain a better appreciation of the role that immigrants play in our country.

  • Check Out The View: Our nation was built on the optimism of our founding fathers. Students explore the benefits and challenges of being optimistic and pessimistic while gaining a new perspective on current events as they compare them to historical events.

  • Citizenship: Mind Mapping: Many consider citizenship in our country a privilege. Many have died for that privilege. Through this mind-mapping exercise, students gain a better understanding of the meaning of citizenship and their role in helping to protect our democratic freedoms.

  • We've Got the Power (3 Parts): Young people can feel powerless in the face of terrorist attacks, gang violence, and school shootings. With this three-part series, students create a small-group project that addresses the issue of random acts of violence. They are reminded that there are far more good and caring people in the world than those who wish to do harm to others, and that it takes only one person with one idea to spark a positive force for change.

  • What Will I Do This Summer? (2 Parts): Volunteerism plays an essential role in our democracy. As summer vacation approaches, it's important to remind students of the value of serving others as a constructive use of their extra time over the summer months.

Commitment

  • Winners Never Quit: All of us at some point in our lives have felt like giving up or quitting. This classroom activity helps students understand the importance of not giving up when presented with challenging situations or events.

Confidence

  • Tests Are A Bummer!: Being tested is part of life. With today's high-stakes testing, many students are feeling stressed and anxious about their performance. This lesson plan provides them with the opportunity to identify feelings associated with taking tests, and they learn methods for counteracting negative feelings.

Courage

  • Courage: Mind-Mapping: It takes courage to face our fears. Students explore the meaning of courage and consider situations in which they might benefit by acting with courage. They decide upon one thing they can do to break through any fear that keeps them from being courageous.

  • Life Preservers: Not only can the values and principles we choose to live by help us make smarter choices, but they can also act as life preservers when we find ourselves in potentially dangerous waters. Students explore the notion that making the right choice is easier when they discipline themselves.

  • Facing The Truth: When we are faced with the temptation to lie, we are faced with a choice. Students explore the fears connected with telling the truth and the connection this has with self-confidence and courage.

  • The Error of our Ways (3 parts): We all make mistakes. Students explore the emotion of guilt and how it can work either for or against us in dealing with those mistakes. They discover that it takes courage to admit when they have made a poor choice and to take responsibility for the consequences.

Fairness

  • It's Not Fair!: Sometimes things happen that we do not like, but that doesn't mean that it was unfair. Using a coin toss as a springboard, students examine random events in their lives and recognize that some things are out of our control and may seem unfair.

  • Good Luck/Bad Luck?: Life isn't always fair. Some things are completely out of our control. This classroom experience allows students to explore four specific scenarios and discuss the unfairness of some uncontrollable occurrences.

  • Don't Look At Me!: Young people frequently want to assign blame to others. This classroom activity allows them to recognize that it is unfair to expect others to take responsibility for our own mistakes. Students gain a better understanding of the respect they earn when treating others with fairness.

  • Fairness: Mind Mapping: Being fair-minded is important quality to possess. With this mind-mapping exercise, students gain a better understanding of what it means to be fair, just, and balanced.

  • Why Me?: Treating others fairly is a good first step to getting treated fairly. Students experience how it feels to be treated unfairly, discuss why it is important to treat other students fairly, and make a list of how to respond when they see someone else being treated unfairly.

Honesty

  • Honesty: Mind-Mapping: Being honest has everything to do with being honorable. Students explore the meaning of the word "honesty" and gain a better understanding of why being honest is an important expression of respect for others and for oneself.

  • Honesty: Blocks, Barriers and Benefits: Honest behavior is not always easy. Students explore the blocks, barriers, and difficulties of being honest. They also discuss the benefits available to a person who overcomes the challenges and chooses honest behavior.

  • Don't Cry Wolf: Trust is the foundation of all healthy relationships. Students explore the classic children's story about the little boy who cried wolf, and make very real connections to challenges they may be facing in relationships.

  • Have I Got a Deal for You!: Imagine for a moment that everyone stopped stealing. How would that impact prices, insurance costs, family finances, and business opportunities? Students explore the ripple effects of stealing and of buying stolen merchandise.

  • Get Real!: Most of us at some time in our lives have made an excuse for dishonest behavior. To become truly honest people, we have to begin by being honest with ourselves. Students explore how dishonest behavior impacts their self-concept, and look at ways to hold themselves accountable.

  • Is it Really a Lie?: Being dishonest can mean telling a lie, or it can mean not telling the whole truth. Students define what it is to lie, examine scenarios in which there are varying degrees of lying, and consider that even a small lie is a lie.

  • Should I Say It?: It's not always easy to know how to be honest and open. Students discuss a variety of situations in which saying what they think could be harmful to someone. They explore whether it is always appropriate to be completely forward with our thoughts, feelings, and opinions.

Integrity

  • Integrity: Who Wants To Be Rich?: Living a rich life doesn't necessarily mean having a lot of money. You can have a lot of money and have no self-respect and no real happiness. With this lesson plan, students explore the value of living a life of integrity.

  • Integrity Counts (3 parts): Current events testify to the fact that careers can be ruined by a lack of integrity. With this lesson plan students explore the consequences of being dishonest, especially when one is in a leadership role.

  • Integrity: Mind Mapping: The actions of people with integrity are always in harmony with the words they speak. Their actions and words are integrated. With this mind-mapping exercise, students explore the meaning of integrity and how acting with integrity earns respect.

Loyalty

  • Loyalty Has Boundaries (3 parts): A loyal friend is one who wants us to make wise choices, even when those choices are difficult to make. In this three-part series, students experience peer pressure in a controlled environment in order to better understand how their thinking affects what they feel and how their feelings affect what they do.

Respect

  • Respect: Blocks, Barriers and Benefits: It's not always easy to act respectfully. With this lesson plan, students explore the blocks, barriers, and difficulties to being a respectful human being. They also discuss the benefits one receives from overcoming those challenges.

  • Don't Pressure Me! (3 parts): It's good to be pressured to be our best. With this classroom experience, students explore both negative and positive peer pressure. Students create skits demonstrating how to turn a negative situation into a positive one by applying positive peer pressure.

  • What A Drag!: Anger is a natural emotion. What's important is deciding how you handle your anger. With this lesson plan, students explore the idea that repressing anger and carrying it around is self-defeating. They discuss healthy ways to control anger.

  • Walking The Talk (3 parts): It's predictable that as long as individuals treat each other disrespectfully, there will be incidents of violence in our homes, schools, and communities. Students explore the connection between respectful behavior and reduced violence, as well as the economic ramifications.

  • Me Too!: Most teenagers feel judged by the way they look. Using poll results taken from Teen magazine, students gain more empathy for one another as they come to realize that this is a common feeling.

  • Rules, Rules, Rules! (2 parts): Students frequently think that rules are unfair. They seldom stop to consider the reasons behind the rules. With this lesson plan, students identify rules with which they do not agree, and defend the reasons for those rules.

  • But They Don't Understand (2 parts): Sometimes we need to consider things from the perspective of others in order to understand. Students consider a topic, issue, or event with which they think differently from someone in the public eye. The student writes from both his or her perspective and from the perspective of the person on the opposite side of the issue.

  • Getting To Know You: The more we learn about others, the more we learn about ourselves. This lesson plan builds an understanding that open communication facilitates a better understanding of others as well as of ourselves.

  • I Am Who I Am: Disrespectful behavior in any relationship is not acceptable. With this lesson plan, students identify specific characteristics of disrespectful behavior and consider appropriate actions when they are in a relationship with someone who is treating them disrespectfully.

  • Listen Up!: Listening skills can lead to better relationships, grades, and job opportunities. With this lesson plan, students compare and contrast good listening skills and poor listening skills.

  • Respect: Mind Mapping: When you give respect to others, you are willing at least to consider their perspectives. Through a mind-mapping exercise students explore the meaning of the word "respect" and consider the value of seeing things from another's point of view.

  • Respect: Playing Percentages: It's been said that 90% of all conflicts and disagreements are caused by misunderstandings. This classroom experience allows students to explore this idea and consider a simple way to avoid disagreements and create more understanding.

  • I Understand, But Disagree (2 parts): Have you ever had a disagreement with someone and later discovered that it was all a misunderstanding? In this two-part series, students explore the difference between understanding someone's point of view and agreeing with his or her point of view.

  • You Belong to Me (4 parts): Young people don't always understand the difference between positive influence and negative manipulation. This four-part series provides an in-depth exploration of this difference, and how it applies to their peer relationships, and then demonstrates their understanding by creating and performing skits.

Responsibility

  • Who's To Blame?: What's the difference between blame and responsibility? This classroom experience helps students understand their emotions and reactions to being blamed for something versus being asked to take responsibility.

  • Life As A Sponge: It's important to make the choice to surround ourselves with people who want us to do our best. With this lesson plan, students consider the influence of those people with whom they choose to associate.

  • Are You Bad News?: Is media news a reflection of our society? This classroom experience encourages students to reflect upon media news and to discuss questions such as: should there be more coverage of positive news events and do we have any personal responsibility for what's in the news?

  • Plan For Success: If you want to succeed, it's important to have a plan. This lesson plan helps students create an action plan for success in each of their classes as well as in conduct.

  • Responsibility: School Graffiti: What is graffiti? Students define and discuss graffiti and then experience a positive way to use graffiti to express their opinions about the school climate, their teaches, their peers, and changes they would make at school if they could.

  • My Day In A Nutshell: Balancing our lives is an important part of being successful. Using a worksheet, students examine their personal use of time during a twenty-four hour period in order to determine where they are channeling their energy, and ways to create more balance.

  • Responsibility: Mind Mapping: Many young people think that responsibility is a burden and serves only to restrict their freedom. With this mind-mapping activity, students explore how making responsible choices can lead to more freedom and better outcomes.

Self-Discipline

  • Self-Discipline: Mind-Mapping: Most students associate the word "discipline" with punishment, yet at its roots, the word "discipline" means "to learn." This mind-mapping experience helps students gain a better understanding of the benefits of being self-disciplined.

  • Half Full or Half Empty?: Taking a pessimistic attitude can be an easy way out for some students. With this classroom activity, students explore the challenges and the benefits of being pessimistic or optimistic.

Self Esteem

  • I Can't Believe This is Happening To Me! (2 parts): We will all experience rejection many times in life, and each time we do it's an opportunity to grow. This two-part series helps students understand that although they cannot control how others feel, they can learn coping skills that will help them deal with being rejected.

  • Self-Esteem: Did You Know?: This is a great activity for the first week or two of school that helps students get to know one another. By using a fun worksheet, they acknowledge each other's talents, interests, and hobbies while discovering commonalities.

  • Self-Esteem: What I Know: This is a fun way for students to assess their knowledge of a particular subject or unit.

Tolerance

  • Together Everyone Achieves More (2 parts): When everyone cooperates, together we achieve more. By working through a playful activity with imposed restrictions, students will discover the value of cooperating with people who are different, in order to reach a common goal.

  • What's the Difference?: Some students feel uncomfortable being with others who are different from themselves. This classroom experience helps students discover that opening their minds to new experiences and ideas will facilitate understanding and respect of others.

  • Sounds Good to Me (2 parts): This is a perfect activity for a music, band, choir, or chorale class. Students will experience harmony and disharmony in sound, and then expand that experience to discuss the results of harmony and disharmony in relationships.

  • Defining Others: Stereotyping allows for no individuality or critical judgment. This classroom activity helps students understand that stereotyping is a sign of disrespect for the uniqueness and diversity of individuals.

  • Hot Under the Collar: We all get angry at different things. Not everyone may feel as strongly about something as we do. This activity helps students understand that anger is a natural emotion and that each of us sees things differently.

Trustworthiness

  • What's Yours is Mine, Right? (3 parts): Shoplifting and stealing are serious problems with our nation's youth. In this three-part activity, students create skits that demonstrate the ripple effect of stealing other people's property. They gain a better understanding of the value of being trustworthy.

  • Ups and Downs (2 parts): Trust in relationships can take time to build. This two-part series helps students understand how breaking the rules can cause distrust in relationships, and that trust is built on honesty and integrity.

  • What Did You Say? (3 parts): Remember the Telephone Game? Some called it the Gossip Game. Using this childhood game as a springboard, this activity helps students learn that active listening skills can help build trust in any relationship.

  • Trustworthiness: Mind Mapping: To be worthy of something means you earned it. This mind-mapping activity will give students a better understanding of the meaning of the word "trustworthy" and the concept that one has to earn the trust of others.

Please note: Sharing this link with anyone outside of your school is a violation of your MindOH! licensing agreement. For questions about MindOH! character education lesson plans, or to submit a suggestion for a future lesson plan, email us at customersupport@mindoh.com.


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  2004 Character's Cool
  Contest Statistic


Which events do you think may have caused people around the world to practice more tolerance

 September 11th: 84%
 The war in Iraq: 63%
 The slowdown of the U.S. economy after September 11th: 30%
 High unemployment in the U.S. after September 11th: 33%
 Events in Afghanistan: 38%
 The earthquake in Iran: 15%
 The Israeli/Palestinian conflict: 21%

(5,939 students participated)

  Famous Quotation 


"Character isn't inherited. One builds it daily by the way one thinks and acts, thought by thought, action by action."
-- Helen Gahagen Douglas