NSTP1 CWTS1 Lecture
NSTP1 CWTS1 Lecture
SELF
Realization Perception
Him/Her
self Oneself
Commitment
Human Environment
Person
Behavior
Object - Physical
Biological
Concept - Love
Any Issues
Situation - Politics
State of Religion
Oneself Readiness Society
Behavior
Manners of Conducting Oneself
C. Ten Commandments of Human Relations
1. Speak to people. There is nothing as nice as a cheerful word of
greeting.
2. Smile at people. It takes 65 muscles to frown and only 15 to smile.
3. Call people by name. The sweetest music to everyone’s ear is the
sound of his/her own name.
4. Be friendly and helpful. If you would have friends, be friendly.
5. Be cordial. Speak and not act as if everything you do were a genuine
pleasure.
6. Be genuinely interested in people. You can like everybody if you try.
7. Be generous with praise – Take caution in criticizing.
8. Be considerate with the feelings of others. It will be appreciated.
9. Be thoughtful with the opinion of others. There are three sides to a
controversy – yours, the other fellow’s, and the right one.
10. Be alert to give service. What counts most in life is what we do for
others.
D. Mission Possible Team (I Can Win)
1. Successful people have a positive mental attitude.
2. Successful people are courageous people who take risk.
3. Successful people choose well.
4. Successful people persist.
5. Successful people adhere to the power of Prayer.
6. Successful people know how to pace themselves and journey through life
with enthusiasm.
7. Successful people govern themselves with discipline.
8. Successful people give the best to whatever they do.
9. Successful people keep a positive count by responding positively to any
person or situation.
10. Successful people align their sense of purpose with the common good.
11. Successful people harmonize with encouragement.
12. Successful people are decisive people who makes things happen.
Name: ________________________ Course: _______________
1. Parents
2. Spouse/Children
3. Friends/Neighbor
4. Church
5. Co-Worker
F. Important Choices in Life
Choices Motivation of Choices
2. Single-Blessedness
1. Myself
(Sa aking Sarili)
2. My Family
(Sa aking Pamilya)
3. My Community
(Sa aking Komunidad)
II. VALUE DEVELOPMENT
A. Value Defined
1. Value is derived from the Latin word, valere, to be worth, be
strong-something intrinsically valuable or desirable. A thing has
value when it is perceive as good and desirable. To develop is to
acquire gradually, by successive changes, to move from the
original position-to one proving more opportunity for effective
use. Thus, values development is the act, process or result of
developing the values for a Human Dignity.
2. Since values are the bases of judging what attitudes and
behavior are correct and desirable and what are not, it is therefore
crucial that there be an appropriate framework as well as strategy
for providing the context and operational guidelines for
implementing a values education program (DECS Values
Education Program Framework, Values Education for Filipino,
1988).
B. Values Systems: Various Views
According to Clyde Kluckholm: “A value is a conception, explicit or implicit,
distinctive of an individual or characteristic of a group, of the desirable which
influences the selection from available modes, means and ends of action.”
According to Cornelius Van Der Poel: “Value refers to the understanding of a
certain good for an individual or society which is considered worthy of
realization.”
According to Brian Hall, Michael Kenny & Maury Smith: “Something tat is
freely chosen from alternatives and is acted upon, that which the individual
celebrates as being part of the creative integration in development as a person.”
A value is something or someone who is considered good or worthy and is
desirable or useful. It is something considered worthy by a person or a group. It
can be one-word standard of conduct (respect) or a policy everyone in an
organization adheres to and believe in. society depends on certain values like
cooperation and honesty. To function values may also be concepts considered
importantly by a select group, and not by others. It may be explicitly stated as
they are more and more in organizations. Or they may be unspoken, yet
recognized by all.
C. VALUES EDUCATION
Values education is the process by which values are formed in the learner under the
guidance of the teachers and parents as he/she interacts with his/her environment.
1. Values as subject matter must have a direct and immediate relevance to the
personal life of the learner.
2. The process must involve all the faculties of the learners. It must not just be
cognitive. It must appeal not only to the mind but to the heart, recognizing the
total human person.
3. The teacher’s and parent’s personal values play an important role in values
learning.
D. The Why, When, Where, Who, What, and How, in Teaching Values
1. Why teach values?
because our parents tried to teach them to us
because they are what makes our society safe and workable
because it helps develop a sense of autonomy,
independence, and confidence
because it is the most significant and effective thing to attain happiness
2. When? Value should be taught to all ages with differing agendas and changing
emphasis as one gets mature. Teach values now and always.
3. Where? Values are best taught in the home, in either the positive or the negative
sense. It can be far more influential than what is taught in school.
4. Who? Parents are the crucial examples and instructors of values. They are the
general contractor. The teachers, the institution and organizations are considered as
subcontractors serving as supplement, support and back up of parents.
5. What? Decide which values to teach. Choose a teaching system that will help you
decide what to teach.
6. How? There are methods especially designed in teaching values to pre-schoolers,
elementary ages, adolescents and community people.
E. IMPORTANCE OF TEACHING VALUES
1. Values are extremely powerful. They guide people and identify what behavior is
acceptable and what behavior is not. It is a principle that either accomplishes a well-
being or prevents harm or does both. It is something that helps or something that
prevents hurt.
2. Values have to do with being and with giving. It is who we are and what we give
rather than what we have that make up our truest inner selves.
3. The values of being (who we are) are honesty, courage, peaceability, self-
reliance, discipline and fidelity. These are given as they are gained and practiced
on the “outer” as they are developed in the “inner”. The values of giving (what
we give) are respect, love, loyalty, unselfishness, kindness and mercy. These
gained and developed as they are practiced.
F. The Values of Being and Giving
1. On Values of Being:
Honesty
Honesty must be practiced with other individuals, with institutions, with
society and with self. The inner strength and confidence are bred by exacting
truthfulness, trustworthiness, and integrity.
Courage
This means daring to attempt difficult things that are good. It is the strength
not to follow the crowd, to say no and mean it and influence others by it. It
means being true to convictions and following good impulses even when
they are unpopular or inconvenient. It means boldness to be outgoing and
friendly.
Peaceability
This means calmness, peacefulness, and serenity. It is the tendency to
accommodate rather that argue. It is the ability to understand how others feel
rather than simply reacting to them. It means the control of temper.
Self-Reliance and Potential
This means individuality, awareness and development of gifts and uniqueness. It
means taking responsibility for one’s own actions. It means overcoming the
tendency to blame others for difficulties. It is commitment to personal
excellence.
Self-Discipline and Moderation
This refers to physical, mental and financial self-discipline. It means moderation
in speaking, in eating and exercising. It also means the controlling and bridling
of one’s own appetites and understanding the limits of body and mind. It means
avoiding the dangers of extreme, unbalanced viewpoint.
Fidelity and Chastity
This refers to the value and security of fidelity within marriage and restraint and
limits before marriage. It is the commitment that go with marriage and that
should go with sex.
2. On Values of Giving:
Loyalty and Dependability
This refers to loyalty to family, to employers, to country, to church, to schools and to
other organizations and institutions. It means reliability and consistency in doing what
you say you will do.
Respect
This means respect for life, for property, for parents, for elders, for nature, and for the
beliefs and rights of others. It refers to courtesy, politeness, and manners. It means self-
respect and the avoidance of self-criticism.
Love
It means individual and personal caring that goes beneath and beyond loyalty and
respect. It means love for friends, neighbors even adversaries, and prioritized, lifelong
commitment of love for family.
Unselfishness and Sensitivity
This means becoming more extra-centered and less self-centered. It means learning to
feel with and for others. It refers to empathy, tolerance, brotherhood, sensitivity to needs
in people and situations.
Kindness and Friendship
This refers to awareness that being kind and considerate is more admirable than
being tough or strong. The tendency to understand rather than confront, and be
gentle, particularly toward those who are younger and weaker. It is the ability to
make and keep friends. It means helpfulness and cheerfulness.
Justice and Mercy
This refers to obedience to law, fairness in work and play. It is an understanding
of the natural consequences and the law of harvest. It refers to the grasp of
mercy and forgiveness and an understanding of the futility (and bitter poison) of
carrying a grudge.
G. Value Formation
The Christian Value-Formation is a lifelong process of growing which gets its
strength from Jesus’ sermon on the mount. The following factors affect one’s
value formation:
1. Two (2) Factors Affecting Value Formation
* Influences – these depend on a person’s internal influences such as
intellectual and emotional capabilities.
* Experience Factor – like good influences, good experiences are needed in value
formation.
2. There are four (4) types of experiences that will influence or affect the formation
of values
* Liturgical Experience
* Bible Experience
* Learning Experience
* Human Experience
H. Value Clarification – Value Clarification is a difficult task
1. There are three basic steps that are useful in Value Clarification:
* Choice
* Value
* Action
2. Values are better than rules.
Forward- thinking – the organization promotes values to guide people. Doing
this serves time because organizations need not write rules, and need not refer to
rule books or organization manual.
3. Values serve as outline goals.
An explicit set of values shall form the foundation of any organization because they
endure.
4. Values send a message.
A good value teaches and guides the members of the organization.
A symbolic act affirms the value over and over.
5. Values shape an organization.
Value manifest itself in various ways. It trusts members to produce quality good
products. Values can shape and animate an organization.
If the victim has no pulse, Trace ribs into notch: place Same as adult One finger width below
locate the chest 2 fingers on sternum nipple line
compression landmark
Do chest compression 2 hands stacked: heel of Heel of 1 hand on sternum 2 or 3 fingers on sternum
with: one hand on sternum
Rates of compressions per 80 to 100 80 to 100 At least 100
minute:
Compression depth: 1 ½ to 2” 1 to 1 ½” ½ to 1”