19 Tex. Admin. Code § 120.7 - Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Positive Character Traits and Personal Skills, Grades 6-8, Adopted 2020
(a) Implementation. The provisions of this
section shall be implemented by school districts beginning with the 2021-2022
school year.
(1) School districts and
open-enrollment charter schools are required to provide instruction in the
essential knowledge and skills for positive character traits and personal
skills outlined in this subchapter at least once in the following grade bands:
Kindergarten-Grade 2, Grades 3-5, Grades 6-8, and Grades 9-12.
(2) School districts may provide the required
instruction in a variety of arrangements, including through a stand-alone
course or by integrating the positive character traits standards in the
essential knowledge and skills for one or more courses or subject areas at the
appropriate grade levels.
(b) Introduction.
(1) Character education introduces students
to character traits and personal skills that empower them to be good citizens
who are trustworthy, responsible, and caring. The character traits and personal
skills reflect positive beliefs, attitudes, and mindsets; provide opportunities
for self-reflection; and permit students to apply effective strategies to make
decisions, solve problems, and behave responsibly.
(2) The standards for positive character
traits and personal skills are comprised of four strands: trustworthiness,
responsibility, caring, and citizenship. Each strand consists of the following
character traits and personal skills.
(A)
Trustworthiness: honesty, integrity, loyalty, punctuality, and
reliability.
(B) Responsibility:
accountability, diligence, perseverance, self-control, and
self-management.
(C) Caring:
interpersonal skills, including charity, compassion, consideration,
cooperation, empathy, generosity, kindness, and patience.
(D) Good citizenship: having concern for the
common good and the community; having respect for authority, law, justice, and
the rights of others; being free from prejudice; having gratitude and school
pride; being courteous, fair, and patriotic; and making responsible
decisions.
(3) Students
are expected to develop an awareness of self-identity as well as recognize
multiple perspectives, differences, diversity, biases, and the social and
cultural context in which they live.
(4) The knowledge and skills for positive
character traits and personal skills are organized in the following grade
bands: Kindergarten-Grade 2, Grades 3-5, Grades 6-8, and Grades 9-12. However,
due to the complexity of the concepts, student expectations and knowledge and
skills statements cannot be taught, discussed, or viewed in
isolation.
(5) Statements that
contain the word "including" reference content that must be mastered, while
those containing the phrase "such as" are intended as possible illustrative
examples.
(c) Knowledge
and skills.
(1) Trustworthiness. The student
understands how personal skills, choices, and actions build trustworthiness.
The student is expected to:
(A) describe what
it means to be reliable and loyal;
(B) define and give examples of honesty and
integrity;
(C) examine the benefits
of being trustworthy; and
(D)
describe personal actions that demonstrate trustworthiness at school, home,
with peers, and within the community.
(2) Responsibility. The student understands
how personal beliefs and feelings and self-management skills influence one's
sense of responsibility. The student is expected to:
(A) examine how personal beliefs, thoughts,
and feelings about self can build responsibility;
(B) identify and describe personal role
models who demonstrate what it means to be accountable for words and
actions;
(C) discuss the benefits
of practicing self-management skills; and
(D) compare the benefits of responsible
behavior with the consequences of irresponsible behavior.
(3) Caring. The student understands how
interpersonal skills and characteristics of caring impact personal
relationships. The student is expected to:
(A)
evaluate one's personal attitudes and mindsets about self and others;
(B) discuss how feelings, decision making,
personal behaviors, and interpersonal skills can influence relationships with
others; and
(C) explain and
identify examples of how a person can demonstrate empathy through kindness,
charity, generosity, and courtesy.
(4) Good citizenship. The student understands
how responsible decision making and good citizenship impact personal
relationships. The student is expected to:
(A)
differentiate between personal responsibility and responsible decision making
and give examples of each;
(B)
explain how one's personal actions can impact the perception of others;
and
(C) identify and practice a
variety of conflict-resolution skills and strategies.
Notes
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No prior version found.