Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Teaching Character through Team Leadership Jobs

While every student may not excel in athletics, every child feels valued and important in Kate Schill's lower campus Physical Education class.  "My team  counts on me," said Hayley in 2nd grade.  "As Equipment Manager I have to do a lot!" This is the culture that Miss. Schill has created for her students.   Through the development of student jobs, the lower campus gym is a place where every student matters and feels the responsibility to help others.

"I started team jobs over ten years ago for a variety of reasons," said Miss Schill.  Each quarter, students are placed into teams of 5 and assigned individual jobs for the team.  From Clothing Keeper to Problem Solver, each student is given responsibilities and consequently learn to work effectively together.  You can see right from the start that it helps create order and cuts down on chaos, but this is secondary to helping students practice leadership and Union Academy's eight Character Traits.

The skills learned in elementary PE are remembered years later as evidenced in speaking with current eighth grade student Jack Vitacco.  "I loved PE with Miss Schill," he said.  "Because of the teams in her class I was able to get to know my classmates better. I learned to never give up, even if it seemed too hard."   That is another benefit of student jobs; they help students feel connected to others by building relationships.  In addition, they provide opportunities for students to feel regular successes and appreciated.

Miss Schill advocates that all classrooms could benefit from creating student jobs in their classrooms.  Leader In Me, by  S, Covey states that teachers begin by asking themselves, "What can students do that I am currently doing?"  The key is not so much the jobs the students are doing, but the fact that they are taking ownership for the orderliness and success of the classroom.  Take a look in Miss Schill's gym.  Talk to her current or previous students and you will see that the lessons they learn in her PE class are more than how to hold a hockey stick or the proper form for push-ups.  They learn that they are significant to achieving their own success and to the success of others.  Those are the long-term lesson of Character Education.

Teachers and staff look below for some ideas on ways to create leadership jobs for students:



Help spread the word on how Union Academy focuses on Character Education.  Email Kelly Brun at kbrun@unionacademy.org with suggestions on a teacher, lesson, activity, or practice that should be highlighted on this blog.









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