Both adults and kids today have a problem being honest In an ABC News Poll in April 2018, seven out of 10 high schoolers say that students at their school cheat, even though most of them know that cheating is wrong. Brandon Gaille points out that “60 percent of adults cannot have a 10-minute conversation without lying once.” According to the National Association for Shoplifting Prevention, there are approximately 27 million shoplifters in America today, and 25 percent of those are kids. We – both adults and kids – have a problem being honest.
Honesty is speaking and acting truthfully.
Here are five ideas for how we can help our students embrace Benjamin Franklin’s words of wisdom, Honesty is the best policy:
In one of my favorite children’s books, The Honest-to-Goodness Truth by Patricia C. McKissack, Libby learns some tough lessons about honesty from the caring adults in her community. Likewise, it is up to us to teach our children the importance of honesty. As I tell the kids I work with; when we learn how to be honest in the small things, we are building our honesty muscles as well as building trust with parents, teachers, and friends.
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