The advantages of being able to read and write can hardly be overstated. Ideas are the
most powerful things in the world and the written word is their sacred repository. But,
this vast repository contains both good ideas and bad ideas, and the most empowering
thing in the world is to be able to distinguish one from the other. Throughout history,
individuals and nations have ruined themselves for want of this ability.
So, as we teach our children how to read and write, whether at home or at school, it
is incumbent upon us to help them not only learn how to distinguish one word from
another, but also how to distinguish one idea from another. To help you understand how
to do this, let me first introduce you to a concept called character based learning. I think
you'll find it a good idea.
Character based learning is learning in which students are improving their
reasoning skills, increasing their knowledge, and enlarging their moral understanding-all
at the same time. When these three processes occur together, children are not only
strengthened in their resolve to live virtuous and productive lives, they are also given the
tools that will enable them to do so. In other words, we are empowering them with the
ability to recognize right from wrong-to distinguish good ideas from bad ideas.
In order for character based learning to take place, it is necessary for the head, the
heart, and often the hand to be engaged in the learning process. Few things are better
suited for this process than good literature, whether factual or fictional.
Good literature is food for the mind and food for the soul. And, when coupled with
appropriate discussion and writing exercises, good literature is capable of providing
children with extraordinary insights into the nature of right and wrong-of why some
things are good and others bad, and why it is terribly important to be able to distinguish
the one from the other.
In applying character based learning techniques to the teaching of reading and
writing skills, we are pursuing three objectives at the same time. 1) We are teaching
young people how to read and write. 2) We are teaching them how to distinguish between
right and wrong, and 3) We are helping them develop their reasoning skills.
In applying character based learning techniques to teaching reading and writing,
there is an important rule we need to always keep in mind.
Only Motivated Children Learn to Read and Write
The motivation or desire to read is purely a function of interest. Interest is
generated by essentially three things-curiosity (a desire to know or understand),
enjoyment (the pleasure of learning or being entertained), and necessity (a recognized
need to know.)
There are three people I believe every child should get to know. As young children,
the lives of each of these individuals were dramatically changed by learning how to read
and write.
The first person is Frederick Douglass, a boy who recognized a need to know.
Every young person should know the incredible story of how he learned to read and write.
It is the story of an eight year old slave boy who realized that if he ever wanted to be
something other than a slave, he needed to learn how to read and write. Illiteracy creates
its own form of slavery and this idea is as relevant today as it was then.
The second person is Helen Keller. Most people are familiar with her story, but I
wonder if we really comprehend the significance of what she learned that day at the
well-the idea that made her little body tremble as a new revelation flooded her mind.
What was this idea that empowered her with the ability to think and reason, to
comprehend and understand for the first time in her life, and infused her soul with a
hunger to learn? It was the realization that words have meaning! It's an idea many who
have never been either deaf nor dumb have failed to grasp. With that realization, Helen
developed an insatiable joy in learning.
The third person is Ben Carson, a boy who discovered a new interest. You can read
Ben's story in a book titled "Gifted Hands.It is a book about a boy who in his early years
of schooling mostly received D's and F's on his report card, but when once his interest
was fired, went on to become a prominent neurosurgeon. The person who turned his life
around was his mother. She believed he could do much better so she turned off the TV set
and told him that he could only watch two TV programs a week and that he had to read at
least two books a week. He was obedient, if not happy with the rule, but soon found he
had an interest in science books. This interest became the basis for his rise from an F
student to an A student, and eventually made it possible for him to become one of the
foremost surgeon's in his field. For Ben, what began with little curiosity about a science
book led to an eminent career as a brain surgeon.
In developing lesson plans or selecting reading material we need to continually
strive to make sure that students recognize their need to know, have an interest in, or
derive pleasure from what we are asking them to read.
The most important experience children need to have in reading may best be
described by the word nourishment. As we teach children to read, it is very important that
we strive to nourish their hungry minds. To do this we must expose them to nourishing
literature. So what is nourishing literature? Let me begin by telling you what it's not.
It is not cotton candy-literature with only entertainment value. We all enjoy a little
cotton candy in life, but if all we ever ate was cotton candy, we would be sick, weak, and
probably toothless. The same is true with mental food. Literature with only entertainment
value does little to nourish young and growing minds.
It is not Tofu-literature with no entertainment value. Now, while Tofu may be a
healthy food, it is hardly an interesting one of itself, and as a result, many refuse to eat it.
If literature does not engage the mind, it will never be ingested-much less digested.
Finally, it is not chicken that's been left out all day-literature with toxic ideas or
information. While the chicken may look and taste just fine, it can be fatal to those who
eat it. In "The Decent of Man", Charles Darwin wrote, "Whatever makes any bad thought
familiar to the mind, renders its performance so much the easier."
But, here we come to an important difference between physical and mental food.
Once a choice has been made to consume healthy food for the body, physical nourishment
occurs as a natural, unconscious process. To benefit from mental food, however, one
must consciously digest it. Mere consumption is not sufficient
Therefore, in teaching children right from wrong, we must encourage them to give
conscious thought to what they read and write. We can best do this by: 1. Helping them to
recognize important ideas when they encounter them, and 2. Providing opportunities for
them to express their thoughts about these ideas
Sir. Francis Bacon wrote, "Reading maketh a full man, conference a ready man, and
writing an exact man." The reason is simple. We understand ideas at one level when we
hear them, at another when we read them, still another when we discuss them, and yet
another when we write them. Writing requires greater exactness of thought and
expression than simply speaking. Similarly, speaking requires greater exactness than
reading, and reading a greater exactness than hearing. Hence, the very process of
communicating an idea to others helps us to examine it more closely and think about it
more deeply.
Discussion may be facilitated by employing the HIF Questions:
Hindsight Questions require students to reflect on what they already know about the
topic or matter at hand.
Insight Questions require students to probe for new or increased understanding of
the topic or matter at hand.
Foresight Questions require students to look ahead and anticipate how this
information may help them in the future.
With close attention to providing students with exposure to nourishing literature
and opportunities to discuss, either verbally or in writing, the ideas or lessons the
literature provides, we can do much toward providing our young with the ability to
distinguish bad ideas from good ideas.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
For more information on character based learning visit
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