How might individuals and society address the issues of poverty, homelessness and hunger, and their underlying causes?
NOTE: Prior to this lesson, use the Blue Sky Activity in which students envision a better world. If you already have a Blue Sky display, revisit it before beginning this lesson.
Students learn about and discuss the motivations for giving. They explore applications of these motivations to their own lives and to The Drive goal of addressing poverty, hunger, and homelessness.
The learner will:
- respond to a poem about working for change.
- give examples of motivations for giving and serving.
- write a paragraph or poem about personal motivations.
It is important to be sensitive to the possibility that someone in your class may have some personal experience with homelessness, hunger and poverty.
Anticipatory Set:
Read aloud the poem “Passing the Dream” by Penny Caldwell from Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul. Project the poem for students to read a second time silently or in pairs.
- Ask students what they think the poem encourages us to do. Ask them to point out lines that express thoughts and questions they have had. Ask them what it means to work for change. Have them each make a short, personal list of things they want to change.
- Review the meaning of common good (what is best for all, not just self-interest). Tell the students that philanthropy is giving time, talent, or treasure for the common good. Ask the students if taking action for the common good is an obligation? Is giving and serving a right or a responsibility? Ask students to debate these questions, giving supporting arguments for their answers. They may come up with a better term than obligation or responsibility.
- Lead the discussion to ask, "Why do we give to others? What inspires us to want to help others in need?" Listen to student responses and list some words they come up with on the display board (to make things better, to be kind, because she did something nice for me, to make friends, etc).
- Tell the students that some experts have studied this question and come up with seven motivations for giving and serving:
- community
- religion
- good business
- social function
- giving back
- family tradition
- selfless concern for others
- Display Attachment One: Motivations for Giving on the overhead projector or distribute copies. Read through and discuss the seven motivations. Refer to the list students generated about why we give, and match up their ideas with the seven motivations. Look for similarities and differences. Encourage the students to give specific examples of philanthropy and identify the possible motivations (e.g. Boy Scout project is a social function and a family tradition).
- Introduce three new terms and challenge the students to use constructive (constructing meaning based on what they already know) and structural (splitting words in to parts to determine meaning) analysis to decode the vocabulary. Use a dictionary or the definitions below to confirm the meanings of the words. Then discuss how these three terms relate to the seven motivations for giving.
- enlightened self-interest (to sacrifice a small part of their time and resources to the benefit of the whole, which, in turn, benefits themselves)
- altruism (selfless concern for the welfare of others)
- egoism (theory of ethics that sets as its goal the benefit, pleasure, or greatest good of oneself alone)
- Have the students write a paragraph or poem about their own personal motivations for giving. They should refer to vocabulary or concepts from the seven motivations and the three new terms above. Also, have them use as a reference the personal list of things they want to change sparked by the poem at the beginning of the lesson.
- Discuss and come to a decision about what the class will do to collect items and support The Drive.
Student writing includes articulate explanation of personal motivations and reflects understanding of new concepts.
Discuss the concept of serial reciprocity. Read the poem "Smile" on page 123 of Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul.
Lesson Developed and Piloted by:
Thomas Webb
From The Seven Faces of Philanthropy by Russ A. Prince and Karen M. File
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