This document provides a matching activity where students must match 10 human values with their definitions. The values are friendship, respect, responsibility, tolerance, freedom, honesty, perseverance, generosity, solidarity, and dignity. The definitions cover relationships between people, positive feelings of esteem, innate rights to be valued, giving without expecting return, individual control of actions, duties or obligations, unity based on shared interests, being upright and fair, steady persistence despite difficulties, and a fair and objective attitude toward differing opinions.
This document provides a matching activity where students must match 10 human values with their definitions. The values are friendship, respect, responsibility, tolerance, freedom, honesty, perseverance, generosity, solidarity, and dignity. The definitions cover relationships between people, positive feelings of esteem, innate rights to be valued, giving without expecting return, individual control of actions, duties or obligations, unity based on shared interests, being upright and fair, steady persistence despite difficulties, and a fair and objective attitude toward differing opinions.
This document provides a matching activity where students must match 10 human values with their definitions. The values are friendship, respect, responsibility, tolerance, freedom, honesty, perseverance, generosity, solidarity, and dignity. The definitions cover relationships between people, positive feelings of esteem, innate rights to be valued, giving without expecting return, individual control of actions, duties or obligations, unity based on shared interests, being upright and fair, steady persistence despite difficulties, and a fair and objective attitude toward differing opinions.
English I Student:_______________________________________________________ Group:____ Match de human value with its meaning. 1. Its a relationship of mutual affection between two or more people 2. Its a positive feeling of esteem or deference for a person or other entity (such as a nation or a religion), and also specific actions and conduct representative of that esteem. 3. Moral, ethical, legal, and political discussions use the concept of dignity to express the idea that a being has an innate right to be valued, respected, and to receive ethical treatment. 4. Its the habit of giving without expecting anything in return 5. Individual capacity to control the own actions 6. A duty or obligation to perform or complete a task successfully (assigned by someone, or created by the very promise or circumstances itself) to be met 7. Its unity (as of a group or class) which produces or is based on unities of interests, objectives, standards, and sympathies 8. The quality or fact of being honest; uprightness and fairness. 9. Steady persistence in a course of action, a purpose, a state, etc., especially in spite of difficulties, obstacles, or discouragement. 10. A fair, objective, and permissive attitude toward opinions, beliefs, and practices that differ from one's own.
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