A co-educational, non-sectarian, independent school serving grades PreK through 8th since 1982

Character & Competence

At Almaden Country Day School, we believe a competent student is academically strong but also confident, kind, and socially aware.

More than a decade ago, we adopted a nationally recognized Character and Competence program, which is fully integrated into our curriculum across all subjects and grade levels.

Rather than providing character education or study skills as separate and discrete lessons, Character and Competence is woven into our daily lessons, classroom expectations and community culture.

From our weekly class meetings where students come together to work through issues cooperatively, to the elementary students collaborating to prepare and produce our yearly musical theater productions, this culture of respect is an integral and cherished part of the ACDS way.

Why facts are just the foundation

Factual information is what typically comes to mind when thinking about what students learn at school — math, science and history, for example. Factual information forms the basis of grade-level academic standards and provides the content for standardized tests.

Yet imagine a student who understands academic facts, but doesn’t know how to set goals, manage time or apply those facts to a new set of variables. These are “achievement skills,” and they allow students to apply their academic knowledge constructively.

ACDS proactively teaches achievement skills in addition to traditional academics. Time management, team building, goal setting, prioritization, and study skills are important components of our Character and Competence program, integrated into lessons at every grade level.

Competence Requires Character

Beyond factual information and achievement skills, there is still more for a student to learn before becoming truly competent. Today’s world is replete with examples of intelligent men and women who have achieved much in life, but who have done so in ways that can hurt either themselves or others. They missed developing the third part of competence: character.

Teaching Character and Competence

At ACDS, we proactively teach students how to make decisions that reflect care, concern, and respect toward themselves and others. Character and Competence comprises lessons that promote and reinforce qualities including empathy, honesty, integrity and social awareness.

Starting in our elementary grades, ACDS students meet in weekly class meetings to discuss ethical issues, interpersonal concerns and other topics from their own perspectives. Our Middle School electives include Social Justice and Global Community Service, which help students develop their sense of social awareness.

Acknowledging Character and Competence

In the spirit of these ideals, each year at graduation ACDS presents the “Nan Hunter Award,” named in honor of the school’s founder, to a child who most wholly represents the ideals of kindness, service and joy. While we honor students with academic achievement during the commencement ceremony, and share anecdotes from the faculty about every member of the graduating class, we make it a priority to recognize a student who captures the spirit of our Character and Competence curriculum.

Character and Competence is a critical dimension of learning at ACDS. Program activities help foster a wholesome, respectful, and positive learning environment on our campus that is evident to everyone who visits and sees our teachers and students interacting. Because of our success at integrating character education at the core of our academic program, children feel safe here to take the risks necessary to maximize their potential and define the gifts that help shape ACDS students as confident, kind and competent.

“What you do speaks so loudly that I cannot hear what you say." — Ralph Waldo Emerson