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Your Place in the Community (10th Grade)
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Focus Question(s):

What does it mean to be a member of a community?

NOTE: Prior to this lesson, use the Blue Sky Activity in which students envision a better world.  If you already have a Blue Sky display, revisit it before beginning this lesson.

Purpose:

Discover through introspection, discussion, reflection and research, the learner’s own personal values/beliefs, the values/beliefs of their peers and how they compare. Using the conclusions drawn from the comparisons of the two survey’s results, determine the rationale/motivation for working together to accomplish the common good.

Duration:

One Fifty-Minute Class Period

Objectives:

The learner will:

  • determine and identify values/beliefs through a survey.
  • identify values/beliefs shared by the learners with their peers.
  • identify how involvement in a community service project might reflect the values/beliefs that the learner and his peers have identified.

Materials:

  • Attachment One: Survey of Self Values/Beliefs
  • Attachment Two: Peer Survey
  • Attachment Three: Sample Surveys
Handout 1
Survey of Self Values/Beliefs
Handout 2
Peer Survey
Handout 3
Sample Surveys

Instructional Procedure(s):

Anticipatory Set:

As learners enter the room, have a variety of teen oriented survey results displayed in the room (or copies to handout to the students).  Ask learners to take a few moments to look at the surveys.  Ask how they think these results were obtained and engage the learners in a discussion as to how and why surveys might be valuable ways to secure information.

  • Place the word “Value” on the display board and ask the learners what the word means to them.  Indicate that for today’s lesson they will be using this definition:
    Value: (n) The quality or worth of something that makes it valuable; material worth; a principal regarded as worthwhile or desirable - Value (v) to estimate the value or worth of; to regard very highly; to rate according to importance, worth or usefulness, valueless (adj)
  • Distribute Attachment One: Survey of Self Values and explain the ranking system and how it is intended to help the learners determine the ‘value’ that they place on a particular concepts and ideas.  Class members complete the survey.  (This survey is for the learners’ own information and will not be handed in or included in any assessment collection other than that it has been completed.)
  • Tell the learners that they will now be taking the Attachment Two: Peer Survey (explaining to them that they are to indicate their opinion/what they think might be the collective ranking their peers would give to each value.
  • Once completed, have the learners look at their two completed survey rankings for each value and compare/contrast the results.  Tell them that you are interested in having them indicate to you if they would conclude that overall the rankings of the values they hold and those in their opinion/“what they think,” their peers hold, are very similar or very different.
  • Using a Likert Scale- 0-5, have them rate their conclusion 0= very different, 2-3 somewhat different/somewhat the same, and 5 =very much the same located on the last page of Attachment Two.  Place a Likert Scale on a display board :

0          1           2             3           4          5

Very different - Somewhat Different - Very Similar

  • Have each learner, in turn, share his/her personal rating of their conclusion while you place a tally-mark on or near the rank number. (NOTE: Typically on survey of this nature, the learner would tend to underestimate the values his peers would place on things, while overestimate his/her own values.)
  • Brainstorm with the students what conclusions might be drawn for this exercise. 
  • Place the word “community” on the display board and “remind” the students that community is defined as: a group of people living in the same area and under the same government; a class or group having common interests and likes.
  • Ask the learners if they think that this means that people who live in a community might also share similar values as well as common interests and likes? Why or why not?
  • Engage the learners in a discussion that answers the questions: 1) How might being involved in the community reflect my personal values?  2) What might be the positive results of working with my peers for the benefit of the community?  3) How might working with peers for the common good of the community reflect shared values?  What values might be evident?

Learning Link(s): (click to view)

Reflection: (click to view)

Bibliographical References:

Lesson Developed By:

Dennis VanHaitsma
Curriculum Consultant
Learning to Give

Handouts:

Handout 1Print Handout 1

Survey of Self Values/Beliefs

Rate the following words to indicate how much you value each item as it contributes to your image of yourself.  Circle the number that BEST describes you.

 I Value... 1=
Not at all Important
2=
Not Very Important
3=
Somewhat Important
4=
Very Important
Caring        

Active Giving

       
Education        
Family        
Loyalty        
Reliability        
Respect        
Truth and Honesty        
Sharing        
Kindness        
Friendship        
Helping Others        
Courage        
Self Discipline        
Patience        
Compassion        
Altruism        
Equality        
Generosity        
Integrity        
Empathy        

 

Handout 2Print Handout 2

Peer Survey

In your opinion what value do you think your peers would give to each word?

My Peers
Value...
1=
Not at all Important
2=
Not Very Important
3=
Somewhat Important
4=
Very Important
Safety        

Cooperation

       
Physical environment        
Emotional environment        
Quiet        
Activity        
Kindness        
Freedon        
Honesty        
Competition        
Respect        
Democracy        
Justice        
Fairness        
Diversity        
Listening        
Friends        
Conflict resolution        
Hygiene        

Handout 3Print Handout 3

Sample Surveys

Results of Nationwide Undercover Survey Released
Marketing Violent Entertainment to Children and Industry Self-Regulation

The Federal Trade Commission released its 2003 nationwide undercover survey of stores and theaters, or “mystery shopper” study. The survey was conducted to collect data on the extent to which retailers prevent children from purchasing entertainment products that have been rated or labeled by entertainment industry self-regulatory associations or entertainment producers as potentially inappropriate for children. Commission staff, through a contractor, recruited 13 to 16-year-olds unaccompanied by a parent to attempt to purchase movie tickets, movies on DVD, music recordings, and electronic games at 899 theaters and stores in 39 states. The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention at the Department of Justice funded the survey. The 2003 survey shows that 69 percent of the teenage shoppers were able to buy M-rated games; 83 percent were able to buy explicit-labeled recordings; and 36 percent were successful in purchasing tickets for admission to an R-rated film at movie theaters (see Table 1 below). For the first time, the Commission also surveyed DVD retailers, where 81% of the teen shoppers were successful in purchasing R-rated movies on DVD.

Table 1: Intersurvey Comparison

Was the shopper able to buy the product or admission ticket? (Percent “Yes”)

Entertainment Product Type

2000 Survey Results

2001 Survey Results

2003 Survey Results
Movie Theater Ticket 46% 48% 36%*
Movie on DVD n/a n/a 81%
Music Recording 85% 90% 83%*
Electronic Game 85% 78% 69%*

* Denotes a statistically significant difference from the 2001 survey. Data for comparison were not available for DVD retailers.

 

 



Youth and Underage Drinking: An Overview
Highlights from SAMHSA’s National Household Survey on Drug Abuse

 

All youth, ages 12-17:

  • 7.2 million drank at least once in the past year
  • 2.7 million drank about once a month or more in the past year
  • 1 million drank at least once a week or more in the past year
  • Girls were as likely as boys their age to drink alcohol
  • Hispanic youth were as likely as white non-Hispanic youth to be current drinkers
  • Black non-Hispanic youth were the least likely of the racial/ethnic groups to be current drinkers
  • 66 percent thought drinking 4 or 5 alcoholic drinks nearly every day was a great risk
  • 47 percent thought drinking 4 or 5 alcoholic drinks once or twice a week was a great risk

All youth, ages 12-17:

  • 13 percent had at least one serious problem related to drinking in the past year
  • 6 percent had built up tolerance to the effects of alcohol
  • 3 percent reported psychological problems related to their drinking
  • 1 percent reported health problems related to their drinking

Youth, ages 12-17, who drank any alcohol in the past year:

  • 39 percent had at least one serious problem related to drinking in the past year
  • 18 percent had built up tolerance to the effects of alcohol
  • 8 percent reported psychological problems related to their drinking
  • 4 percent reported health problems related to their drinking

Youth, ages 12-17, who drank heavily (5 or more drinks on 5 or more occasions in the past month):

  • 77 percent had at least one serious problem related to drinking in the past year
  • 63 percent had built up tolerance to the effects of alcohol
  • 20 percent reported psychological problems related to their drinking
  • 12 percent reported health problems related to their drinking

U.S. department of Health and Human Services accessed August 2005 from http://www.health.org/govpubs/rpo990/

 

 



New Jersey Student Health Survey

The survey was administered to 1,399 students in 26 public high schools in New Jersey. Students were presented with 92 multiple choice items covering seven broad areas of teen behavior: safety behaviors; violence; use of tobacco; use of alcohol and drugs; sexual behaviors; dietary behaviors; and physical activity.

Among the survey findings in the spring of 2003:

  • Approximately one quarter (24%) of students engaged in binge drinking (5 or more drinks in a row) during the prior 30 days.
  • One in five (19%) students used marijuana in the prior 30 days and 4% used cocaine.
  • Ten percent of students had experienced sexual contact against their will at some time in their lives.
  • Ten percent of students watched five or more hours of television on an average school day.
  • One in five students are either at-risk for being overweight (12%) or are clearly overweight/obese (9%) based upon their self-reported height and weight for their age and gender.

New Jersey Department of Education: Summary of the New Jersey Student Health Survey accessed August 2005 from http://www.state.nj.us/njded/students/yrbs/2003/njshs.pdf

Philanthropy Framework:

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Unit Contents:

Overview:Your Place in the Community (10th Grade) Summary

Lessons:

1.
Your Place in the Community (10th Grade)

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