Tprof Tcooo1 The teaching proffesion.pdf

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About This Presentation

Reviewer and lesson for teaching profession


Slide Content

Value Formation
Juan Miguel Boyo, Kenneth Ocenar, Mary Joy Canares

How are you today?
Happy SurprisedSad Goods
Angy DisgustConfusedExcited

Learning Objectives
0
At the end of the lesson 90% of the learners are
able to:

Differentiate the 3 Dimension of Values;

explain Max Scheler's Hierarchy of Value;

apply the lesson in a real life situation.

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SHORT REVIEW
Moral or Not?

Value Formation
Juan Miguel Boyo, Kenneth Ocenar, Mary Joy Canares

CONCEPT MAP
VALUE FORMATION
Affective
Cognitive
3 Dimension of
Value
Max Scheler's
Hierarchy of Value
Pleasure Value
Vital Value
Psychomotor
Training the
Intellect and Will
Spiritual Value
Value of Holy

Value Formation
Value01
■Value can mean monetary
worth, usefulness, or guiding
beliefs and principles. It may also
refer to a number in math, a
note’s length in music, or a
color’s lightness in art—its
meaning depends on the
context.

Value Formation
Idealist POV 02
■It is a perspective that prioritizes
ideals like justice, truth, and
beauty over material reality,
inspiring progress but risking
impracticality or
disappointment.
■Unchanging and universal Value

Value Formation
Relativist POV02
■It is the belief that truth,
knowledge, and morality are
relative to individual, cultural, or
historical contexts, with no
universal standards for
judgment.
■There is no unchanging and
universal value

Value Formation
Transcendent Value 03
■It is a universal principle that
rises above self-interest, using
values like truth, justice, mercy,
and compassion to guide
decisions and build unity and
respect.
■Values of love, care, and concern

3 Dimension of Value
COGNITIVE
AFFECTIVE
PSYCHO-MOTOR

3 Dimension of Value
Cognitive Dimension01
■It refers to mental processes like
knowing, remembering, and
thinking, with context-specific
uses in education, design, or
strategy, but always tied to how
the mind processes and
interprets information.

3 Dimension of Value
Affective Dimension02
■It is the human experience of
emotions, attitudes, motivations,
and values, shaping emotional
responses and influencing
well-being, learning, and social
interaction.

3 Dimension of Value
Psychomotor Dimension03
■It is a learning domain centered
on physical movement and
motor skills, covering everything
from basic reflexes to complex
actions, guided by perception,
readiness, practice, and
adaptation.

Value Formation
■Value formation meaning is the
process of developing moral character
by knowing, choosing, and practicing
what is true, good, right, and bad.
■Value formation is considered a
training of both the intellect and the
will.
■St. Thomas Aquinas: “The intellect
process, and the will disposes.”

The role of intellect in value formation

The intellect of humans discerns our values,
judging them as right or wrong, true or false,
good or bad.

William Kelly, 1965: The intellect must be trained
to present what is truly good, not just what
appears good.

The role of will in value formation

William Kelly, 1965: Training of the will is
essentially self-training, requiring self-control
and discipline
The will strengthens a person to act on what
is right and avoid what is wrong.

.

How do intellect and will work together in forming values?
St. Thomas Aquinas: Nothing is willed unless it is
first known.
The intellect proposes what is desirable, and the will
disposes by choosing to act on it.This means the
intellect guides us by knowing the good, while the
will gives us the strength to choose and practice it.

Max Scheler’s Hierarchy of Value
Max Scheler
■German Philosopher
■Proponent of Hierarchy of
Value

Max Scheler’s Hierarchy of Value
Value Hierarchy
■Value comes from latin word
“valare” which means “to be
of worth”.
■Hierarchy is the
arrangement of things
represented as being above,
below, or at same level.

Max Scheler’s Hierarchy of Value
Value Hierarchy
■Is an organized arrangement
of Values based on their
importance.
■This shows how we prioritize
what is important in our life.

Pleasure Value
Vital Values
Spiritual
Values
Value of Holy
Max Scheler’s Hierarchy of
Value

Any Questions.

Tapos na po.

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