World Languages, asked by ahanam1019, 4 months ago

From the Moral Values tree shown in the picture above, choose your top 5 Moral Values that mean the most to youandmake your own tree of Moral Values. Below the tree, writea paragraph in about 60 wordsabout one Principal Moral Valuethat is of foremost importance to you

Answers

Answered by Arfath24
0

Answer:

see in this app the answer is there

Answered by mufiahmotors
1

Answer:

What are your deepest held moral values? How are you teaching these values to your children? Are you doing it alone or are you seeking help from religious organizations or other resources?

Teaching your kids moral values is one of the most important responsibilities you have as a parent. In order for your children to act morally, they need to know the good, care about the good and practice doing the good.

The way your kids choose to treat others is critical. There are too many news stories of children committing suicide due in part to the cruel behavior of other kids. There are too many kids posting mean comments on social media. Too many kids avoiding activities due to bullying. How do you guide your kids in treating others?

Knowing the Good

What does it mean to be a good person? What traits does your family most value? Renée Trudeau, author of Nurturing the Soul of Your Family, shared that when her son was entering middle school they created a “Family Purpose Statement”. She described they “highlighted the top five qualities that were most important to us. At the top of our list: compassion – for self and for others.”

What virtues make your family’s top five list? Some to consider include:

Acceptance: welcoming others whose ideas and practices differ from your own

Compassion: understanding the suffering of others or self and wanting to do something about it

Cooperation: helping your family and friends, returning favors

Courage: willingness to do difficult things

Equality: believing everyone deserves equal rights and to be treated with respect

Fairness: acting in a just way, sharing appropriately

Generosity: willingness to give resources, help or time to others

Gratitude: showing appreciation to others, letting loved ones know what you appreciate about them

Honesty: being truthful and sincere

Integrity: sticking to your moral and ethical principles and values

Kindness: being considerate and treating others well

Perseverance: persisting in a course of action, belief or purpose

Politeness: using good manners, acting in socially acceptable ways

Respect: showing consideration for the worth of someone or something

Responsibility: being reliable in your obligations

Self-control: staying in control of your words and behavior

Tolerance: having a fair and objective attitude towards different opinions, beliefs or practices

Trustworthy: reliably doing what is right even when it is difficult, being true to your word

One way to help your children internalize these characteristics is to notice them. When you see your child being responsible, honest or showing compassion, comment on it. For example, if your child attempts to comfort a child who is hurt, you can say “That’s kind of you to help him.”

mark me as brainlist

Explanation:

Similar questions