Moral Education of Children
By: Mike • Essay • 337 Words • January 15, 2010 • 1,001 Views
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Moral education has always been an issue in schools. Although the methodology and the content have changed over the past years, ways to implement and bring these theories into the classroom and internalize them within children is still one of the important research topics.
Moral education is most successful when it is passive and indirect. We all know that our best and deepest moments of learning were when we actually didn’t know that we are doing so. Somebody told us a story, we watched a movie or we saw the outcomes of somebody else’s experience. Besides, everyone knows the child that is burnt by fire will learn not to touch it anymore; so self-experiencing is another factor that deepens learning. There’s one more thing. Isn’t childhood a period to play? Do we have the right to lessen the joy that supposed to exist in one child’s life to teach him/ her moral values? Can there be a better way to combine play, self-experiencing and indirect teaching? Well, in our world everything is not capable of being experienced. We all worry for our children. We can not just let them to try everything out just for the purpose of deep learning.
But let