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There is a growing consensus among pediatricians, psychologists and educators that the youths are not OK. But the absence of mental illness is not the same as well-being. The real goal should be to raise youths with lives of purpose, internalized values and strong relationships, what psychologists call "flourishing." Values of honor, service and self-sacrifice are inspirational and should be a part of a solution against youth languishing. Revive the dialogue around character education.
Character education systematically teaches ethics and virtuous habits such as gratitude, honesty and social responsibility. Over the past 30 years, research on moral development grew much faster than other psychology subdisciplines and became more diverse and interdisciplinary. When school-based character education is prioritized, it improves conflict resolution and moral reasoning and strengthens relationships. In sum, researchers know more than ever about evidence-based practices in character education. Yet policies and curricula emphasize intellectual and performance virtues (e.g., curiosity and determination) over moral or civic ones (e.g., honesty and service).
The Department of Education hasn't mentioned the words "character," "virtue," "moral" or even "justice" in the last two strategic plans, covering 2014 through 2022. The last mention of character in a Department of Education strategic plan was the one from 2002-07, in which one of the six goals was to "develop safe schools and strong character."
Character education isn't prioritized. The Department of Education's own "What Works" clearinghouse hasn't tracked character interventions for 15 years. A current search for character or moral development in that database will find outdated reports and broken links or sources focused on "grit" and "growth mindset."
Browsing through the standards across 50 states, few states explicitly prioritize virtues beyond self-interest. Researchers have called this avoidance moral phobia — when administrators and policymakers carefully side-step ethical language and pivot to social skills. State legislatures have paid increasing attention to "personal success skills," "soft skills" or "non-cognitive skills."
Developing social and emotional competence is indispensable in schools. It is also insufficient. If children are taught soft skills because it will make them feel better or be smarter, they won't have the moral fiber necessary for complex ethical decisionmaking.