Character Compass
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Product details
- ISBN 9798895570302
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 11 Nov 2025
- Publisher: Harvard Educational Publishing Group
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
Character Compass, Second Edition returns to three, high-performing urban schools in Boston to reassess their distinct commitments to character education. Classical Academy prizes moral character, College Bound Middle School emphasizes performance character, and Civitas Prep prioritizes civic character. To this group, Scott Seider, Shelby Clark, and Madora Soutter add Bright Ideas Middle School, which champions intellectual character. They describe the ways in which these four school's distinctive character goals lead them to emphasize different programming and practices and to nurture different dimensions of their students' characters.
Seider, Clark, and Soutter reconnect with the students that were interviewed more than a decade ago to ask how character education influenced their trajectories, and they invite the volume's original school leaders to share how their thinking has and has not changed. Their research reaffirms the foundational strength of character education in building a powerful school culture where students can thrive, and a new case-study on a school emphasizing intellectual character broadens the framework's reach.
With its rare longitudinal and retrospective perspective, Character Compass, Second Edition provides K-2 educators and school leaders with powerful guidance for making character development central to their mission of supporting student success. Updates also help practitioners hone their chosen approach to best complement their own unique institutional commitments, community, and context.
Scott Seider is a professor of applied developmental and educational psychology at Boston College. A former secondary teacher, he is the author or coauthor of several books, including Schooling for Critical Consciousness and Educating for Justice.
Shelby Clark is a principal investigator and project director at The Good Project, based at Project Zero at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, where she studies how teachers within a community of practice implement dilemma-based lessons and how these lessons potentially foster student character growth.
Madora Soutter is an assistant professor of education at Villanova University, where she also directs the undergraduate teacher education program. She has worked as a classroom teacher in public, private, and charter schools.
