Montessori Character Curriculum

I found a neat website that talks of teaching character. It’s a PDF from a Montessori school in Texas. I like it. I substitute at several different school locations a few times each week. Teachers put character words all over their walls. I like that. But this character training has words of integrity coupled with stories that explain them. One of my favorite stories are in the mix. You should read it to your children if you have any 🙂
Five Character Virtues
Grace and Courtesy
Honesty
Self-Discipline – Prudence
Faith and Thanksgiving
Responsibility
“Please” by Alicia Aspinwall


There was once a little word named “Please,” that lived in a small boy’s mouth. Pleases
live in everybody’s mouth, though people often forget they are there.
Now, all Pleases, to be kept strong and happy, should be taken out of the mouth very
often, so they get air. They are like little fish in a bowl, you know, that come popping up to the
top of the water to breathe.
The Please I am going to tell you about lived in the mouth of a boy named Dick; but only
once in a long while did it have a chance to get out. For Dick, I am sorry to say, was a rude little
boy; he hardly ever remembered to say “Please.”
“Give me some bread! I want some water! Give me that book!” – that is the way he
would ask for things.
His father and mother felt badly about this. And, as for the poor Please itself, it would sit
up on the roof of the boy’s mouth day after day, hoping for a chance to get out. It was growing
weaker and weaker every day. This boy Dick had a brother, John.
Now, John was older than Dick – he was almost ten; and he was just as polite as Dick
was rude. So his Please had plenty of fresh air, and was strong and happy.
One day at breakfast, Dick’s Please felt that he must have fresh air, even if he had to run
away. So out he ran – out of Dick’s mouth – and took a long breath. Then he crept across the
table and jumped into John’s mouth!
The Please–who-lived-there was very angry.
“Get out!” he cried. “You don’t belong here! This is my mouth!”
“I know it,” replied Dick’s Please. “I live over there in that brother’s mouth. But alas! I
am not happy there. I am never used. I never get a breath of fresh air. I thought you might be
willing to let me stay here for a day or so – until I felt stronger.”
“Why, certainly,” said the other Please, kindly. “I understand. Stay, of course; and when
my master uses me, we will both go out together. He is kind, and I am sure he would not mind
saying ‘Please’ twice. Stay, as long as you like.”
That noon, at dinner, John wanted some butter, and this is what he said:
“Father, will you pass me the butter, please—please?”
“Certainly,” said the father. “But why be so very polite?”
John did not answer. He was turning to his mother, and said, “Mother, will you give me
a muffin, please—please?”
His mother laughed.
“You shall have the muffin, dear; but why do you say ‘please’ twice?”
“I don’t know,” answered John. The words seem just to jump out, somehow. Katie,
please—please, some water!”
This time, John was almost frightened.
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“Well, well,” said his father, “there is no harm done. One can’t be too ‘pleasing’ in this
world!”
All this time little Dick had been calling, “Give me an egg! I want some milk. Give me a
spoon!” in the rude way he had. But now he stopped and listened to his brother. He thought it
would be fun to try to talk like John; so he began,
“Mother, will you give me a muffin, m-m-m-?”
He was trying to say “please,” but how could he? He never guessed that his own little
Please was sitting in John’s mouth. So he tried again, and asked for the butter.
“Mother, will you pass me the butter, m-m-m-?”
That was all he could say.
So it went on all day, and everyone wondered what was the matter with those two boys.
When night came, they were both so tired and Dick was so cross, that their mother sent them to bed very early.
But the next morning, no sooner had they sat down to breakfast than Dick’s Please ran
home again. He had had so much fresh air the day before that now he was feeling quite strong
and happy. And the very next moment, he had another airing; for Dick said,
“Father, will you cut my orange, please?” Why! The word slipped out as easily as could
be! It sounded just as well as when John said it – John was saying only one “please” this
morning. And from that time on, little Dick was just as polite as his brother.12

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