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sin título
Justice is defined as one of the four
cardinal virtues, it means to give to each one what corresponds or
belongs to him. It is the right, the reason, the fairness. It is what
one must do according to the right or the reason.
Popularly it is understood as the
disposition according to which one is punished or rewarded, according
to what each one deserves. It is what regulates equality or fairness
in the distribution of something, and it establishes the proportion
whereupon it must distribute rewards and punishments.
The child from an early age feels
injustice although he does not know how to explain it, he understands
when a punishment is excessive or it is not in correspondence with
the committed fault and he feels bad for that reason.
The adult has to teach the child to
be fair with others, but for that it is necessary that he sets the
example with a right treatment towards him and the others.
The children will be taught to establish
fair relations with their classmates, both when evaluating their actions
and when sharing some things during play and other activities.
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ACTIVITY
No 1
"THE FOX AND THE STORK"
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Summary
of the activity:
First we will narrate a fable, later we will ask questions on the
story and finally the children will model figures on the story.
Objectives:
• That the children learn the damages of an unfair conduct towards
others.
• To familiarise the children with the notion of justice.
Procedures:
• Conversation
• Narration
• Questions and answers
• Practical Actions
Material
Resources: Clay or plasticine to model.
Development of the activity:
1st Part
The educator will read to the children the selected fable
and he will show them pictures of the characters
"The
fox and the stork".
Once
there was a fox that made friends with a stork; one good day, he decided
to invite her to eat. The guest turned up punctually at the agreed
hour (show the picture of the fox and the stork).
"Welcome,
come in Lady Stork!” the fox said. "I have prepared an
exquisite broth of frog and parsley! Sit down here, please!"
The
broth gave off a delicious smell, but it was served in a shallow plate
(show a picture of the plate with the offered food).
"Thanks,
thanks!”, the stork answered very glad, but she suddenly realised
the nasty joke that the fox was playing on her, because with her long
beak, no matter how hard she tried, she could not manage to eat due
to the shape of the plate (show a picture of the stork with her long
beak trying to eat in a shallow plate)
"Don’t
you like it? I have specially prepared it for you", said the
fox with a malicious smile.
"I’m
sorry, but I have suddenly felt a strong headache that has me lost
my appetite!” answered the offended stork.
The
fox hurried to answer: "A broth good as that....Patience, there
will be another occasion!"•
"Perfect!
Why don’t you come to my house to eat tomorrow? Then I will
be able to correspond to your kind invitation!” the stork proposed.
The
fox turned up at the house of the stork. He found that the stork had
prepared a very rich fish soup, but she had served it within two containers
with long and narrow necks (Show a picture of the containers).
So,
while the bird, thanks to her beak, emptied the container, the fox
had to go without eating (Show a picture of the fox trying to put
his snout in the soup container).
And
while the fox returned to its house dying of hunger, he was convinced
that he had deserved the lesson, he listened to a little voice within
him that said: "You’ve made your bed and now you’ll
have to lie in it..."
This
was the way in which the stork made justice, because she paid the
fox back with his own coin.
2nd Part
The educator will ask the children:
Did you like the story? What have you learned in this story?
Why did the fox say that “you’ve made your bed now you’ll
have to lie in it”?
What does it mean that the stork made justice paying the fox back
with his own coin?
Did the stork want to punish the fox because of what he did to her?
Would you like it if somebody played a bad joke like this on you?
Is what the fox did to the stork right?
The
educator will summarize this part insisting that it was fair for the
stork to punish the fox because of what he did to her.
3rd Part
The educator invites the children to model with clay or
plasticine the containers of the fox and the stork. They can be accompanied
with cut-out cardboard figures of both animals.
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CRITERIAL
ASSESSMENT |
Observed
conduct |
YES |
NO |
Comments |
They
understood the message of the story. |
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They
needed help to understand the message of the story. |
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Their
answers to the questions demonstrate that they understood the damages
that an unfair conduct towards others can cause. |
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They
needed help to understand the damages that an unfair conduct towards
others can cause. |
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They
made comments about the unfair conduct, and they supported the fair
conduct. |
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ACTIVITY
No 2
"HOW FAIR PEOPLE ACT"
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Summary
of the activity:
The educator will explain to the children how fair people act, later
he will lead a cooperation game, with questions to the children, there
will be no competition since everyone will participate to find the
correct answers.
Objectives:
• To develop in the children knowledge about what
is a fair performance.
• To continue reinforcing the notion of justice.
Procedures:
• Explanation
• Questions and answers
• Game
Material
Resources: A deck of cards (one per child) half blue
and the other half red, red and blue question cards.
Development of the activity:
1st Part
The educator will explain to the children how fair and unfair
people act, he will do it using examples so that they can understand
better.
Examples:
•
Fair people give each one what it corresponds or belongs to him, for
example, the teacher who describes the student who worked in a satisfactory
way as "Very good"; the one who worked moderately in a regular
way as "Satisfactory" and the one that made a bad job as
"Poor" is fair when classifying them. But if he gives an
S to the student who worked badly, then he is an unfair person because
he gave him a mark that he did not deserve.
•
Another example is the mother who punishes her two children in the
same way, knowing that although they both were playing in the room,
only one broke the vase, that mother acted unfairly, nevertheless
the mother who warns the child who broke a vase that the next time
he should not play ball near things that can be broken has a fair
attitude.
•
The police that stops the thief because he robbed the purse from an
old lady is carrying out a fair act, the judge who punishes him and
sends him to jail is making justice, because he who steals what does
not belong to him should be punished.
•
A father that always brings gifts home and brings a small thing for
each son and distributes whatever he brings in equal parts, is a just
father.
2nd Part
We will play a cooperation game.
The
educator explains to the children that in this game everybody will
have to cooperate to answer all the questions well and the winner
will be the group in general.
He
distributes red and blue cards in equal parts, so that all the children
have one.
On
the educator’s table there is a card deck with questions, some
will be blue and the others red. A child takes a card, if it is blue
the children with blue cards will start to answer first.
The
educator reads the situation and the question that is in the card
and later he gives the floor to the children who have cards of the
same color as the question card, one by one in an organized way.
All
the children with the same color cards should say something about
the question and in this way they complete the answer among all.
Later
another child will take a second card, and the children with the same
color cards will answer, and so on until they use up all the cards.
After
each question the educator summarizes the answer expressing something
that the children did not say.
Example
of situations and questions:
1.- If you
have in front of you two children and only one of them is your friend,
and you have only one sweet to offer, What would you do if there is
no way to obtain another sweet then?
2. - Juan
finds a pencil in the classroom and knows that Pedro lost it. Juan
does not like Pedro and he decides to give the pencil to his friend
Carmen, although it does not belong to him. Is Juan acting with justice?
Why? What would be the right thing todo in that case?
3. - Jose
complains that his father is not a fair person, because he punishes
him by anything, and his brother is forgiven for everything he does.
Is Jose’s father a fair person with his son? Why?
4. - In
the school they are going to give prizes away, but the headmaster
says that not all the children will get the same prize; because he
considers that they must be distributed according to the value of
what each student has done, for that reason the best prizes will be
for those who have made a greater effort, and who have worked better.
Do you think that this is fair? Is the headmaster right? Why?
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CRITERIAL
ASSESSMENT |
Observed
conduct |
YES |
NO |
Comments |
They
answered the questions correctly. |
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They
needed help to answer the questions. |
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Their
answers demonstrated that they have acquired notions on how to act with
justice. |
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They
needed help to know which is the right performance. |
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ACTIVITY
No 3
"THE ONE WHO DISTRIBUTES SHOULD NOT TAKE
THE BEST PART"
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Summary
of the activity:
This is a mathematical activity in which the children will have
to solve a problem situation.
Objectives:
• To develop in the children feelings of fairness.
• To establish relations between fairness and justice.
Procedures:
• Practical actions
• Analysis
• Synthesis
• Comparison
Material
Resources: 10 rectangles of paper and 10 figures of
children cut and pasted on fine cardboard.
Development of the activity:
1st Part
The child is presented with the following problem situation:
In Carmelita’s
birthday party there were 10 children and she cut the pie in 10
equal parts, but when she was going to distribute them 10 more children
arrived. What would she have to do so that all the children have
the same amount of pie? We are going to help Carmelita.
2nd Part
The educator distributes to the children 10 rectangles
of paper that represent the pieces of the pie and 20 figures of
children and will invite them to distribute the the children and
the pies; the educator will ask:
What do
we have more, children or pies?
And less?
What would you do so that there is the same amount of children and
pies?
What would you do so that each child receives an equal piece of
pie and in this way the pie is distributed with justice?
If
the children do not do solve the problem on their own, the educator
will help them tearing the first rectangle of paper in two equal
pieces and he will tell them that Carmelita decided to cut the pie
in smaller pieces to share it in equal parts among all the children.
Once
the task is done, the children will be asked:
Do you
think that Carmelita’s attitude was correct when she cut the
pie into more pieces?
What would you have done?
Do you think that if the pie was already cut in 10 parts, there
was no reason to worry about those who arrived later and in this
way the next time they would arrive earlier?
The
educator will summarize the activity emphasizing that the attitude
of a fair child is to share with all his friends and to distribute
things in equal parts, although they all would receive less.
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CRITERIAL
ASSESSMENT |
Observed
conduct |
YES |
NO |
Comments |
They
knew how to solve the problem. |
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They
needed help to solve the problem. |
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They
showed feelings of fairness towards their classmates. |
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They
made elementary relations between fairness and justice. |
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ACTIVITY
No 4
"THE POLICE AND THE THIEVES"
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Summary
of the activity:
This is a motion game titled "Police and thieves". The
children will cross a circuit looking for the thieves, during the
route they will run, jump and creep.
Objectives:
That the children appreciate the importance of giving
justice to those who take what does not belong to them.
Procedures:
• Game
• Practical Actions
• Explanation
Material
Resources: A wooden crate of 50 cm. of height, a rope,
cards with drawings of a stone, a shrub and thieves (man with mask
and a bundle on the shoulder). Materials to make the seals of the
"Police Officer" that will be given to the winners.
Development of the activity:
1st Part
The educator will explain to the children that there are
people who take what does not belong to them and that the work of
the police is to find them and to stop them, so that they can be
punished.
The
game is about the police crossing a circuit looking for clues to
catch the thieves and in each section on the way they will find
a clue, the one that finds all the clues will be able to catch the
thief.
The
children will organize themselves in a row and will leave at the
educator’s order one by one to cross the circuit, when the
first one has finished, the second leaves and so on until everybody
has participated.
The
circuit will be organized in the following way:
A line
on the floor with arrows is drawn to indicate in which direction
to run. They will run until they find the first obstacle that will
be a wooden crate of 50 cm. of height which they will have to jump,
after they jump they will find in front of the crate the first card
with the next place where they must go walking (can be a shrub in
the garden, etc.), when they arrive at the shrub they will have
to crawl below a rope at 50 cm. high and on the other side of the
rope they will find a card with a drawing of a stone. Finally, hidden
underneath this stone, they will find the thief (a card with a drawing
of a thief).
Rules
of the game:
1.
- The winner will be children who find the thief.
A
seal will be given to the winners that distinguish them as "
Police Officers".
The
educator will explain to them that they have to take care of the
people who act correctly, who do not take other people's things,
who obey the established laws, and who give the right punishment
to those who deserve it.
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CRITERIAL
ASSESSMENT |
Observed
conduct |
YES |
NO |
Comments |
They
understood the importance of the work of the police to punish those
who take what does not belong to them. |
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They
needed help to understand the importance of the work of the police
to punish those who take what does not belong to them. |
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They
understood that a bad action asks for a punishment. |
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They
stated that they want to act with justice. |
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Summary
of the activity:
This activity consists of a visit to a nearby monument in which
there is a statue of justice. If it is not possible to visit it,
we will set up an imaginary visit to a museum and we will show a
great photo or a picture of a statue of justice with her bandaged
eyes and a balance in the hand.
Objectives:
• To emphasize the representation of justice.
• To relate the image or statue to the notion of justice.
Procedures:
• Conversation
• Visit
Material
Resources: Photos or pictures of the image of justice.
Development of the activity:
1st Part
The educator presents the visit, real or imaginary, telling
them that they are going to know how we represent justice, and that
they have to pay attention to what they are going to see. They have
to be reminded of the notion of fairness, freedom, and love for
their fellows as integral parts of the action of justice, and also
of the punishment when it is disobeyed on purpose.
2nd Part
The visit. During the same the educator will insist that
the children pay attention to all details of the statue or the image,
because later in the classroom they will talk about what they saw.
3rd Part
A group discussion is held on what was observed in the
visit, for this the educator will ask questions such as:
What details
drew your attention in the statue (or the image)?
Why do you think that she is blidnfolded?
Why does she have a balance in her hand?
What does the set of the statue mean?
The
educator will promote the discussion to help the children to reach
conclusions by themselves in which they state:
1. That
the justice is blindfolded because justice is applied without seeing
who the person is, but only what he has done.
2. That
the balance means that it weighs bad and good things, in order to
make a fair decision.
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CRITERIAL
ASSESSMENT |
Observed
conduct |
YES |
NO |
Comments |
They
were impressed by the statue or the image of justice. |
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They
understood what it means to have bandaged eyes. |
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They
related the balance to the notion of the application of a fair decision.
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They
needed help to understand the relations of the symbols with the idea
of justice. |
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They
showed some knowledge about justice. |
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ACTIVITY
No 6
CRITICAL
EXPERIENCE FOR THE EVALUATION OF THE BLOCK
"ORDER
AND TELL"
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Summary
of the activity:
The activity consists of the children working with a deck of cards
with a sequence of actions that the children will order later to
construct a story.
This
activity can serve to evaluate the block.
Objectives:
To determine what the children have learned on justice
and how the right people act.
Procedures:
• Serialization
• Story
Material
Resources: Decks of cards.
Development of the activity:
1st Part
The children will be given a set of the following cards:
First
series of cards
1. - picture
of a man with a cap and a mask.
2. - the same man walking in the street.
3. - he stops in front of a window and jumps into it.
4. - he leaves with a full bag.
5. - a policeman sees him and he starts to run.
6. - the policeman follows him running.
7. - he arrests him.
8. - the man behind bars.
Second
series of cards
1. - a
birthday party.
2. - a girl who is cutting a cake.
3. – the girl distributing the cake to the children.
4. - children eating the cake.
4. - only one child crying and without cake.
Third
Series
1. - children
playing in the street.
2. - a child throwing the ball against a window.
3. - an old man that sees him doing this.
3. - a broken window.
4. - a lady who leans out of the window.
5. - she points to a child who is not guilty.
6. - the old man that argues with the lady.
7. - the lady apologizing to the accused child.
They
are told to put in order the cards; that is, what happened first
and what happened next.
Once
the children have ordered the pictures they will build a story on
what they see in them.
The
story will be considered as good, as long as the children guide
themselves in a logical and coherent way according to the order
that they gave to their pictures.
For
example, the logical order of the first series will be:
From
the card number 1 to 8 in a consecutive way and the story can be:
"There
is a thief that comes walking along the street, he stops next to
a window and he jumps to enter the house and to rob it, he leaves
with a full bag with the things that he has robbed, but he sees
a policeman, he arrests him and they put him in jail for taking
what does not belong to him or because he robbed."
Whenever
a story is finished the educator will emphasize the subject, in
this story it is necessary to stress the fact that the one that
takes what does not belong to him must be punished, and the police
made justice, because as the stork said to the fox in the story
"You’ve made your bed and now you’ll have to lie
in it...”.
The
educator can create other stories whenever they adjust to the objective
that we are working: justice.
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CRITERIAL
ASSESSMENT |
Observed
conduct |
YES |
NO |
Comments |
They
ordered the pictures well. |
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They
needed help to order the pictures well. |
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They
made up a coherent and logical story according to the order given
to the pictures. |
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They
needed help to make a coherent and logical story according to the
order given to the pictures. |
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They
showed knowledge on justice and how fair people act and they did it
in an independent way. |
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They could create stories that demonstrated a defined notion of justice.
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