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Character Education – Moral Virtues, Ethical Decision-Making, and Programme Effectiveness

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Erik Johansson

Swedish and Norwegian teacher emphasizing the connection between language, nature, and Scandinavian lifestyle.

Definition and Core Concept

This article defines Character Education as a deliberate instructional approach aimed at developing specific moral and performance virtues (e.g., honesty, responsibility, respect, perseverance, fairness) in students. Unlike social and emotional learning (SEL), which focuses on emotion regulation and social skillss, character education emphasises ethical reasoning, moral habits, and civic virtues. Core features: (1) explicit teaching of core values (varies by programme), (2) modelling by adults, (3) integration across curriculum (e.g., discussing historical figures’ moral choices), (4) recognition and reinforcement of virtuous behaviour, (5) positive school culture. The article addresses: stated objectives of character education; key concepts including virtue ethics, moral exemplars, and performance vs moral virtues; core mechanisms such as direct instruction, service learning, and discipline policies; international comparisons and debated issues (whose values, effectiveness measurement, indoctrination risks); summary and emerging trends (digital citizenship, sports-based character programmes); and a Q&A section.

1. Specific Aims of This Article

This article describes character education without advocating for any specific set of virtues. Objectives commonly cited: reducing cheating, bullying, and discipline incidents; increasing prosocial behaviour and academic integrity; preparing students for responsible citizenship. The article notes that character education is controversial due to debates over whose moral values should be taught in public schools.

2. Foundational Conceptual Explanations

Key terminology:

  • Performance virtues vs moral virtues: Performance virtues (perseverance, diligence, self-discipline) enable achievement; moral virtues (honesty, fairness, compassion) guide ethical conduct. Programmes often combine both.
  • Moral exemplars: Historical or contemporary figures used as models of virtuous behaviour (e.g., Martin Luther King Jr., Marie Curie, local community heroes).
  • Values clarification: An alternative approach (1970s) avoiding direct moral instruction; emphasises students choosing their own values. Character education generally rejects this as relativistic.
  • Hidden curriculum: Implicit values transmitted through school rules, teacher behaviour, and tracking. Character education aims to make moral expectations explicit.

Historical context: Character education was central to US schooling (19th-century McGuffey Readers), declined mid-20th century, revived 1990s with Character Education Partnership (now Character.org). UK citizenship education (2002) includes character components.

3. Core Mechanisms and In-Depth Elaboration

Direct instruction methods:

  • Weekly lessons on virtues (definition, examples, application to school scenarios).
  • Discussion of moral dilemmas (e.g., Kohlberg’s stages of moral reasoning).
  • Literature-based discussion (characters’ choices).

School culture mechanisms:

  • Word of the month/week: School-wide focus on one virtue (e.g., respect) with activities, announcements, recognition.
  • Discipline as character development: Restorative practices instead of punitive approaches; student reflection on impact of actions.
  • Service learning: Volunteering combined with structured reflection on values.

Effectiveness evidence:

  • Meta-analysis (Berkowitz & Bier, 2005) of 42 character education programmes: average effect d≈0.20–0.30 on prosocial behaviour, academic achievement, and reduction in problem behaviours.
  • More rigorous evaluations (What Works Clearinghouse, US Department of Education) found only 3 of 18 character education programmes met evidence standards with moderate positive effects. No programme showed negative effects.
  • Long-term follow-ups (>1 year) limited; effects tend to diminish without continued reinforcement.

4. Comprehensive Overview and Objective Discussion

Common character virtues across programmes (aggregated):

VirtueIncluded in % of programmes
Respect95%
Responsibility92%
Honesty88%
Fairness78%
Caring/Compassion75%
Perseverance68%
Citizenship60%

Debated issues:

  1. Whose values? Public schools serve diverse religious, cultural, and political backgrounds. Proponents argue universal values exist (e.g., “do not kills”), but specifics (sexuals morality, patriotism, obedience to authority) are contested. Some programmes avoid contentious virtues.
  2. Effectiveness measurement: Most studies use self-report surveys (social desirability bias). Few use behavioural outcomes (discipline referrals, cheating rates) or observer ratings.
  3. Indoctrination risk: Critics argue character education imposes specific moral systems without teaching critical moral reasoning. Some programmes respond by including ethical reasoning and discussion of moral dilemmas.

5. Summary and Future Trajectories

Summary: Character education explicitly teaches moral and performance virtues through direct instruction, school culture, and modelling. Evidence shows small to moderate positive effects on behaviour and achievement, but rigorous studies are fewer. Controversies over whose values and indoctrination persist.

Emerging trends:

  • Digital citizenship as character education: Online behaviour (cyberbullyings, privacy, misinformation) addressed as character domain.
  • Sports-based character programmes: Programmes like Positive Coaching Alliance show moderate effects on sportsmanship and transferable character.
  • School-wide Positive Behavioural Interventions and Supports (PBIS): Overlaps with character education; uses reinforcement of defined positive behaviours.

6. Question-and-Answer Session

Q1: Is character education effective in reducing cheating?
A: Mixed. Some studies show reductions of 20-30% after honour code implementation (older students). Others find no change or increased cheating under high-stakes testing.

Q2: Do character education programmes need to be religiously based?
A: No. Secular programmes (e.g., Character Counts!, Positive Action) exist. Some religious schools use faith-based character curricula.

Q3: How are character virtues selected in public schools?
A: Typically by committees including parents, teachers, administrators, and sometimes students. Many use Character.org’s 11 Principles framework for inclusive selection.

Q4: Can character education be integrated into academic subjects?
A: Yes. History: discuss leaders’ moral choices. Literature: analyse character motivations. Science: ethics of experimentation. Math: fairness in data representation.

https://www.character.org/
https://whatworks.ed.gov/ (WWC character education reviews)
https://ethicsunwrapped.utexas.edu/
https://www.jubileecentre.ac.uk/

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