October 2004
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Building Character Through 4-H School PartnershipsSherry Nickles Vicki Reed Rebecca J. Cropper Kathryn J. Cox Ohio State University Extension BackgroundIn today's global society, it is important to help youth develop character. Since 1997, Ohio 4-H has participated as one of 16 partner organizations in the Ohio Partnership for Character Education (OPCE). Approximately $12,000 was provided annually for 5 years through a Department of Education/OPCE grant to develop pilot 4-H character programs in target counties. 4-H professionals in three counties formed partnerships between 4-H and local schools to plan, conduct, and evaluate programs incorporating best practices identified in recent research for successful youth character development and 4-H school programming (DeBord, Martin, & Mallilo, 1996; Diem, 2001; Harms & Fritz, 2001; Locklear & Mustian, 1998; McDaniel, 1998; McNeely & Wells, 1997). This article shares program highlights and recommendations for developing future 4-H school character education partnerships. Wayne County Character EducationEach year, approximately 3,000 1st through 4th graders participate in Character Counts! programs conducted through the Wayne 4-H school partnership. The 4-H agent trains 12 volunteer teachers annually to conduct programs in 18 elementary schools from October through March. Each month, teachers visit classrooms and facilitate experiential learning activities focused on a pillar of character: trustworthiness, respect, responsibility, fairness, caring, and citizenship. A decision-making and recognition program is held for all students in April. Evaluations indicate that 84% of teachers believe the program teaches students concepts of being persons of good character and is of great immediate use. To supplement the school program, the Extension Agent writes monthly character education newspaper columns and records radio programs. A monthly newsletter, Parent's Pillar, is also written and distributed to each student to take home to parents and caregivers. The FCS Agent also offers a program on teaching character at home to school parent organizations. Muskingum County Character EducationUp to 600 youth annually have been involved in character education through Muskingum 4-H. Delivery methods, cooperating organizations, and schools vary, thus adding to overall awareness and success in reaching diverse audiences. The primary focus of the Muskingum 4-H school partnership is building character with elementary youth. The 4-H Agent conducts in-services for teachers and administrators on Character Counts!. To support their work with students, the partnership provided character education materials through the county's 21 elementary school libraries and support for school character assemblies, student incentive programs, and other efforts. In 2000, the program reached youth in eight additional schools in an expanded partnership with Muskingum Children's Services. Intervention specialists incorporated character education programming in individual and group work with at-risk youth and their parents. A further expansion effort with Muskingum Behavioral Health involved middle and high school students in character education programming. Court-referred youth from two school districts were reached through weekend retreats and after school detention. Brown County Character EducationBrown County 4-H school character education programs are conducted in five school systems by three program assistants funded by United Way. OPCE funds supported Character Counts! programming as part of a leadership skills program in which youth develop decision-making skills for being responsible, trusting, fair, caring, trustworthy citizens. Character education is also incorporated into other 4-H school programs such as Kauffman 4-H Mini-Society, where students set up countries and businesses, and elect leaders to run their countries. Students define characteristics of strong leaders and, over the course of the program, demonstrate greater understanding of the importance of good character for effective leadership. Twelve students in one junior high school were also trained in conflict mediation and established a mediation team to help peers deal with conflict. The team addressed character issues and integrated the six pillars into their resolution processes. Recommendations For Developing 4-H School Character Education PartnershipsThe results of these 4-H character education programs support McDaniel (1998) and DeBord, Martin, and Mallilo's (1996) findings that 4-H school partnerships have the potential to significantly affect youth character development. In addition to the recommendation that 4-H school partnerships should be developed elsewhere, lessons learned over the past 5 years provide the basis for four additional recommendations to enhance the potential success of such partnerships:
Acknowledgment CHARACTER COUNTS!sm is a service mark of the CHARACTER COUNTS! Coalition, a project of the Josephson Institute of Ethics. ReferencesDeBord, K., Martin, M., & Mallilo, T. (1996). Family, school, and community involvement in school-age child care programs: Best practices. Journal of Extension. 34(3). [On-line]. Available at: http://www.joe.org/joe/1996june/a3.html Diem, K. (2001). National 4-H school enrichment survey. Journal of Extension. 39(5). [On- line]. Available at: http://www.joe.org/joe/2001october/rb6.html Harms, K., & Fritz, S. (2001). Internalization of character traits by those who teach Character Counts! Journal of Extension. 39(6) [On-line]. Available at: http://www.joe.org/joe/2001december/a4.html Locklear, E. L., & Mustian, R. D. (1998). Extension-supported school-age child care programs benefit youth. Journal of Extension. 36(3) [On-line]. Available at: http://www.joe.org/joe/1998june/rb4.html McDaniel, A. K. (1998). Character education: Developing effective programs. Journal of Extension. 36(2) [On-Line]. Available at: http://www.joe.org/joe/1998april/a3.html McNeely, N. N., & Wells, B. J. (1997). School enrichment: What factors attract elementary teachers to 4-H science curriculum? Journal of Extension. 35(6). [On-line]. Available at: http://www.joe.org/joe/1997december/tt1.html This article is online at http://www.joe.org/joe/2004august/iw4.shtml. Copyright © by Extension Journal, Inc. ISSN 1077-5315. Articles appearing in the Journal become the property of the Journal. Single copies of articles may be reproduced in electronic or print form for use in educational or training activities. Inclusion of articles in other publications, electronic sources, or systematic large-scale distribution may be done only with prior electronic or written permission of the Journal Editorial Office, joe-ed@joe.org. If you have difficulties viewing or printing this page, please contact JOE Technical Support. |