Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Odalice Feliz

  1. Help Out. You can help out in almost any way. It's all up to you. What do you do best? Do you have a green thumb? If so, then you can plant at your community garden. Do you have a lot of clothes in your closet that you don't wear anymore? Give them to charity! Do you have $10 you don't plan to spend? Donate it to an animal shelter, school or hospital! There are so many things you can do there has to be something for you.

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  2. 2
    Be Kind. You can't give people dirty looks and be rude if you want to be a good citizen. Smile and treat everyone with respect.
  3. 3
    Pick Up Litter. If you see trash laying around don't just stare at it and walk pass it. One day, get a shopping bag and pick up all of the trash that you see.
  4. 4
    Your Encouragement Helps. Even if your just encouraging the little seven year old down the street to learn to ride a skateboard...it's still encouragement.
  5. 5
    Have Good Judgment. Don't do anything thing that would ruin a reputation. You can't be known as a good citizen if you've done anything stupid that would make you known as a bad person.
  6. 6
    Donate. Once again, this can be done in so many ways there has to be something you can do. You can donate canned foods to the homeless on Thanksgiving or you can stuff teddy bears and give them to children.
Put on your "thinking cap" and let's begin your quest. 
1.  You and your partner will need to get one piece of construction paper.  Next, fold the paper in half, "hamburger style", to make a folder.  On the cover, write the word Citizenship and your names.  You may decorate the cover later for extra credit. This folder is where you will keep all of your work.
Click on citizenship to learn the meaning, scroll down and copy the meaning on the inside cover of your folder. 
2. Good citizens do their share of chores at home. On a piece of paper, show how you and your partner are good citizens by each writing at least one chore you do at your house.  Think of one extra chore you can do to be more helpful this week.  Write it down and tell your teacher when you do this job to earn extra points. 
3. Good citizens use polite manners, cooperate, and use kind words with friends. Click on friend to get tips on how to be a good friend.
4. Good citizens follow the rules and respect others at school.  Each of you can pick one school rule and make a poster showing how you follow that rule.  To get more points, pick another rule and make another poster.
5. Good citizens help to keep their community clean and safe. Find out about others that help in your community by clicking on community.  Now copy the sentences below, fill in the first blank with a community helper, fill in the other blanks, and don't forget to put it in your folder. 


            Good citizenship

 

 A good citizen is one who properly fulfils his/her role as a citizen. There are many opinions as to what constitutes a good citizen. Theodore Roosevelt said, "The first requisite of a good citizen in this Republic of ours is that he shall be able and willing to pull his weight."[1] Education is sometimes viewed as a prerequisite to good citizenship, in that it helps citizens make good decisions and deal with demagogues who would delude them. Roger Soder writes that in a democracy, where the demands of good citizenship are placed upon all, "only the common schools can provide to all the education that all need."[2] Science literacy is also frequently touted as a key to good citizenship.[3] Good citizenship is sometimes viewed as requiring both intellectual skills (such as critical thinking) and participatory skills (such as deliberating civilly, monitoring the government, building coalitions, managing conflict peacefully and fairly, and petitioning, speaking or testifying before public bodies).[4]

  • Henry David Thoreau wrote that men who serve the state making "no free exercise whatever of the judgment or of the moral sense...are commonly esteemed good citizens."[5] Orit Ichilov notes that children "tend to perceive the government in the image of an ideal father that is benevolent and protective. At this stage, the good citizen is characterized as one who, through his behavior, proves himself one worthy of the love and protection of the government rather than one possessing certain political obligations and rights." Through their early school years, children usually continue to think in apolitical terms of their citizenship, expressing loyalty by their desire to remain in their country due to an attachment to its beauty, wildlife, and good people. By age twelve or thirteen, they begin referring more to political qualities, such as the nature and values of the regime. High school seniors define the good citizen primarily in political terms.[6] Some students define good citizenship in terms of standing up for what one believes in. Joel Westheimer identifies the personally responsible citizen (who acts responsibly in his community, e.g. by donating blood), the participatory citizen (who is an active member of community organizations and/or improvement efforts) and the justice-oriented citizen (who critically assesses social, political, and economic structures to see beyond surface causes) as three different types of "good citizen."[7]
  • Sometimes incentives prevail over desires to be a good citizen. For example, many people will avoid coming forth as witnesses in court cases because they do not want to deal with the inconvenience and red tape.[8] Aristotle makes a distinction between the good citizen and the good man, writing, "...there cannot be a single absolute excellence of the good citizen. But the good man is so called in virtue of a single absolute excellence. It is thus clear that it is possible to be a good citizen without possessing the excellence which is the quality of a good man." Specifically, in his view, the good citizen is measured in relation to ruling and being ruled, the good man only in ruling. Some of the ambiguity is likely due to more than one Greek word being translated "good."[9]
  • Many organizations attempt to promote "good citizenship." For example, the Boy Scouts of America published Scouting for Boys: A Handbook for Instruction in Good Citizenship, and the Ontario Medal for Good Citizenship is given to those who are deemed to have made outstanding contributions to the well being of their communities without expectation of remuneration or reward. Another non profit organization, Good Citizen, has a mission to teach Americans how to be effective citizens and focuses on 100 citizen actions.




  • Human beings are used to living under laws and patterns that are dictated to us by society, but following those patterns does not make us good citizens. To be a good citizen first you have to be a good person. By that I mean that you have to be full of values, principles, ethics, etc. When joining all these aspects together you will find out that there is nothing else to be needed.
  • One important aspect for being a good citizen is to help people. All around us, we can see there are always people in need for our help. Our job as good citizens is to help those kinds of people. When talking about the people that need our help, I am not only talking about the poor ones, but also the pregnant woman who cannot carry a heavy package or the old man that cannot cross the street. Remember that little actions make the difference.
  • Another important thing we have to remember for being a good citizen is to have an active participation in our community. There are a lot of ways we can do that. When elections come for voting for the governor, we have to be in the line ready to give our vote. When there is a gathering of our neighborhood for deciding about the maintenance of the streets, we have to be there to tell our point of view.
  • The last recommendation for being a good citizen is the respect toward the people that live around us. We have to remember that as we have rights, they have them too. Respect is one of the most important bases when living in a society. We all have freedom, but it is restricted to certain point. We cannot consider a killer or thief good citizens as they have violated that restriction.
  • Through this essay, there have been exposed some ideas of what I think are the most important aspects for being good citizens inside a community. Now-a-days the relationships between people have been really deteriorated by misunderstandings that are generated day by day. To avoid having to deal with these kinds of situations, we have to be aware that the solution is in us. Values and ethics should be inculcated to people as they mature, as that kind of information will built them for being good citizens. 

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