Subject Area: All
Grade level: Adaptable
to all
Overview/Purpose:
The purpose of this section is to identify heroic
actions in various situations. It is especially applicable to elementary
school students who are learning about personal responsibility and
the attributes of being a “good citizen.”
Objectives:
Students are expected to be able to:
- Distinguish between heroic and non-heroic actions
in teacher-provided scenarios.
- Write a scenario depicting an “everyday”
sort of situation in which heroic and non-heroic actions are shown.
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Activities
and Procedures:
Step One:
Review the definition/description/characteristics
of heroes as discussed in Units I and II. Hopefully, students will
recognize that the actions of the heroes they have studied may apply
to situations in their own lives.
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Step Two:
- Break up into small groups or partners. Assign
scenarios depicting situations that could occur in the students’
world. (It is strongly recommended that you include situations the
students make up, as noted in No. 3 below.)
a. Ask students to determine what would be the
“heroic action” in these situations and why. What
would be the probable outcome of this action? Role-playing may
be used in addition to discussions and/or debates.
b. Ask students to think what they might do in
these situations and why. What would be the probable outcome of
their actions? Older students can develop and present plays, radio
broadcasts or songs.
- For younger groups, read your chosen situations
to the class and discuss the above questions as a group.
- Have older students present the situations, then
discuss and debate the responses. You may want to challenge the
older high school or college students with such questions as, “What
do you do when there seems to be no viable solution to the conflict?”
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Step Three:
- Have students devise their own scenarios and create
their own resolutions to the conflicts. Role-playing often works
well for this.
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Step Four: Culminating
or Wrap-up Activity
- In developing a culmination activity, consider
relating it to heroes you studied in the earlier units. Include
the situations these heroes encountered and how those situations
are similar to those your students face today. The culmination activity
does not necessarily mean one in which there are “answers,”
but rather a way to tie together the definitions of a hero.
- Questions that might be useful for culmination
activities include:
a. How do the heroes from the past influence our
thoughts today?
b. Are heroes still important today?
c. Is there still a place for heroes today, and
if so, what is it?
- Challenge your students to offer their own thoughts
as essays, scripts for plays, music lyrics, art, or other forms
of expression that allow them to apply what they learned to their
own lives.
Comments:
Heroic Actions is an especially useful topic for
addressing the personal and group dilemmas of anyone from children
to adults. Activities for this lesson may be used within the confines
of your classroom, extended to the larger campus for college students
or expanded into the community for life learners. Older students’
activities could include role-playing, discussion, debates, writing/producing
plays, radio broadcasts, and songs.
Creating MY HERO Web pages about individual heroes
is a powerful and long-lasting method of empowering the individual
and passing on the story.
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Created by Ann M. Hoffelder, Curriculum Consultant and Allyx Schiavone
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