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Concept of Value: Presented By: Kundan, Nandini, Savitri

The document discusses the concept of value. It defines value as something that is considered good, desirable, and proper according to a culture. Values are specific to cultures and stable over time. They are learned and shape personality. Values can be classified as individual or collective, and intrinsic or instrumental. Common examples of values include theoretical, economic, aesthetic, social, political and religious values. Values regulate behavior, give purpose, and serve as the basis for judgment. Education plays an important role in developing values in students.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views14 pages

Concept of Value: Presented By: Kundan, Nandini, Savitri

The document discusses the concept of value. It defines value as something that is considered good, desirable, and proper according to a culture. Values are specific to cultures and stable over time. They are learned and shape personality. Values can be classified as individual or collective, and intrinsic or instrumental. Common examples of values include theoretical, economic, aesthetic, social, political and religious values. Values regulate behavior, give purpose, and serve as the basis for judgment. Education plays an important role in developing values in students.

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Amaan memon
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CONCEPT OF VALUE

Presented By:
Kundan, Nandini, Savitri
MEANING OF VALUE

 ETYMOLOGICAL MEANING : The word value is derived from Latin ‘valere’ that mean
‘to be strong’ or ‘to be worth’.
 PHILOSOPHICAL MEANING : A value is directly related to a view point or thought.
DEFINITION OF VALUE

 According To John Dewey views, the value means primarily to prize, to esteem, to
appraise, to estimate.
 According To INTERNATIONAL ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ETHICS, value is the ‘relative
level of worth goodness, significance, or utility possessed by an entity, attribute or event
or an intangible quality or attribute that has intrinsic worth in itself’.
 According To HENDERSON, It has been pointed out that man acts to satisfy his wants,
anything which satisfies a human want becomes thereby a value. To say that our conduct
is motivated by our value is another way of saying that we act to satisfy our wants’.
CHARACTERISTICS OF VALUE

 Values may be specific and may be more general.


 Values are different from culture to culture.
 Values are stable.
 Values are learnt.
 Values are part of our personalities.
CLASSIFICATIONS OF VALUE

 Values can be classified into two broad categories.

(1) Individual values


(2) Collective values

 Values can also be’ categorised from the point of view their hierarchical
arrangement:

(1) Intrinsic values


(2) Instrumental values
CLASSIFICATION OF VALUE

 ACCORDING TO EDUARD SPRANGER:


1. The Theoretical
2. The Economic
3. The Aesthetic
4. The Social
5. The Political
6. The Religious
FUNCTIONS OF VALUE

 The main functions of values are -


1. Values play an important role in the integration and fulfilment of man’s basic impulses
and desires in a stable and consistent manner appropriate for his living.
2. They are generic experiences in social action made up of both individual and social
responses and attitudes.
3. They build up societies, integrate social relations.
4. They mould the ideal dimensions of personality and range and depth of culture.
5. They influence people’s behaviour and serve as criteria for evaluating the actions of
others.
6. They have a great role to play in the conduct of social life.
7. They help in creating norms to guide day-to-day behaviour.
IMPORTANCE OF VALUE

 Regulate our day-to-day behaviour.


 Give Ideals and Objectives.
 They express moral imperatives.
 It ends to which we act.
 They are the basis of our judgments.
IMPORTANCE OF VALUE

 Pioneer sociologist Durkheim emphasised the importance of values (though he


used the term ‘morals’) in controlling disruptive individual passions.
 Modem sociologist E. Shils (1972) also makes the same point and calls ‘the central
value system’ (the main values of society) are seen as essential in creating
conformity and order.
 Indian sociologist R.K. Mukerjee (1949) writes: “By their nature, all human relations
and behaviour are imbedded in values.”
EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATION OF VALUES

1. Moral awareness should be endorsed to orient the progress in science & technology
towards the welfare of mankind.
2. Common values should be re-discovered to unite human beings with the general
decline of traditional values.
3. Teachers pass values to the students both consciously and unconsciously through their
conduct in and out of class rooms. Therefore the need for a consciously planned value
education program is obvious to establish a formal learning.
4. The students might face more complicated decision making situations about issues
involving values. They should be helped in developing the ability to make proper
choices in such situations through value education.
5. Increase in Juvenile delinquency is a crisis to youth who under goes the process of
personal growth. In such situation value education assumes a special significance.
6. Value Education awakens curiosity, development of proper interests, attitudes, and
capacity to think and judge about oneself.
DEVELOPING VALUES THROUGH
PROGRAMMES
 Celebration of national festivals .
 Social service programmes .
 Emphasis on the unity of all religious, harmony among
communities and national integration .
 Community prayer in the school.
 Cultural and recreational programmes.
 Health and cleanliness programmes (Ex- swachh Bharat
Abhiyan).
CONCLUSION

 values are collective conceptions of what is considered good, desirable, and proper
or bad, undesirable, and improper in a culture.
 Values are Specific, Different, Stable which are learnt who affect our Personality.
 It can be classified basically into two categories: Intrinsic and Instrumental, broadly
in: Theoretical, Economic, Aesthetic, Social, Political, Religious.
 Value build up Societies, Individual Behaviour and Personality to be called as
‘GOOD’.
 It give Ideals, Objectives to regulate our day-to-day behaviour as well as base for
our Judgment.
REFERENCES:

 [Link]
types-importance/35072/
 [Link]/main/philosophy/[Link]
 ‘Aggrawal, J. C.’, 2012, Psychological, Philosophical and Sociological Foundations
Of Education.
 ‘Saxena, Swaroop’, 2013, Philosophical and Sociological Foundations Of Education.
THANK YOU

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