Monthly Character Certificates for ECS
- Author:
- Jill Drews
- Date Added:
- 11/23/2018
Monthly Character Certificates for ECS
This is a resource to plan Character Day and provide activity ideas all year long!
Included are:
Helpful Links
Attachments
Examples of School Initiatives
These are example rubrics for measuring growth in CHARACTER. Rubrics are provided for K-5, 6-9 and 10-12.
Sun West Character High School 10-12 Guidebook - please use the table of contents to navigate this guidebook. Also, we invite you to share resources you think would be suitable for this guidebook with any of the author's of this guidebook.
Sun West Character Middle Years Grade 6-9 Guidebook - please use the table of contents to navigate this guidebook. Also, we invite you to share resources you think would be suitable for this guidebook with any of the author's of this guidebook.
Sun West Character Elementary K-5 Guidebook - please use the table of contents to navigate this guidebook. Also, we invite you to share resources you think would be suitable for this guidebook with any of the author's of this guidebook.
Each lesson plan relates to Character.org's 11 Principles of Effective Character Education.
Character Playbook is an innovative digital course that uses engaging strategies to educate students about cultivating and maintaining healthy relationships during their critical middle school years. Comprised of six lessons that cover key concepts around positive character development, social-emotional learning (SEL), and building healthy relationships, Character Playbook allows students to engage with real-world scenarios, including examples of bystander intervention, resolving conflicts, effective communication, and positive relationships.
This Course Covers
Analyzing Influences
Understanding & Managing Emotions
Communicating Effectively
Resolving Conflicts
Stepping In
Making Decisions
Check out these great kindness activities that your students can do at school or at home to help them build character and make the world a "Kinder" place.
The resource includes a downloadable list of 31 Acts of Kindness that you can implement in your school or classroom, as well as a 30 Days of Kindness Journal, complete with instructions, kindness quotes and spaces for reflection. There are videos from the creator that will get you started using the resources to help your students create a world that is kind to self and others.
Explore the library of Podcasts to access short podcasts outlining activities that you can implement in your classroom right away.
Listen for free, anytime! Choose from the library of 295 podcasts.
Or sign up for the CharacterStrong Weekly to have the short, to-the-point podcasts delivered directly to your inbox.
The following handout is an assignment for students where they acknowledge their strengths and weaknesses, character traits and self regulation in the classroom.
In this handout, students evaluate their strengths and weaknesses, their character traits and their self regulation in class.
The list of ten things about Opal's absent mother that her father shares in "Because of Winn-Dixie" serves as inspiration for students to create their own lists describing literary characters.
This is a word guessing game, perfect for children! A child acts out a word or phrase (for example a movie or a book), while other kids guess the word or phrase. Choose from the following categories: Actions, Animals, Books, Movies, Places, TV Shows.
Besides "Charades for Kids", the site also includes "Charades Ideas Generator" (for older students/adults), "Christmas Charades Ideas", "How to Play Charades" and "Resources".
If you're looking for some printable charades ideas for kids, you'll find those here too.
Students use balloons to perform several simple experiments to explore static electricity and charge polarization.
Move point charges around on the playing field and then view the electric field, voltages, equipotential lines, and more. It's colorful, it's dynamic, it's free.
Explore giving to registered charities, non-profit organizations and worthy causes as part of one’s financial plan.
In this video art historians Dr. Beth Harris and Dr. Steven Zucker provide a brief overview of Charlemagne and his coronation in 800.
In which John Green teaches you about the Holy Roman Empire by teaching you about Charles V. Charles Hapsburg was the holy Roman Emperor, but he was also the King of Spain. And the King of Germany. And the King of Italy and the Lord of the Netherlands and Count Palatine of Burgundy. In short, Charles was runnin' thangs in much of the world during his reign. Charles ruled a lot of countries, and he was also known for encouraging intellectual discourse and he even spoke out against slavery, in a limited. So why did he consider himself a failure, and why did he break up the Empire when he abdicated in 1556? Mainly because the Holy Roman Empire didn't work very well. It was huge, and it didn't have any means of directly raising taxes. Plus, it was a pretty crazy time in Europe anyway, and Charles found himself in charge of the Catholic-Church-Endorsed Empire in the time of Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation. John will teach you a bit about how Charles put the Empire together, and how it fell apart, and even talk a bit about the Diet of Worms.
Students find examples of adjectives in a shared reading. Then students "become" major characters in a book and describe themselves and other characters, using powerful adjectives.