Global Lehigh Strategic Initiatives (without descriptions)
NORMS: Standards of properly acceptable behavior
1. RVE 4 – GROUP REPORTING
Prepared By:
Kristine Isabel Delgado – La Consolacion
College Bacolod, Philippines
NORMS
standards of proper or
acceptable behavior
2. refers to human nature.
The norms of morality are
meant to compare human acts
to determine whether
someone is good or bad.
-The phrase is from the Catholic religion
N O R M S
3. INFORMAL guideline about what is
considered normal (what is correct or incorrect)
social behavior in a particular group or social
unit.
FORMAL rule or standard laid down by
legal, religious, or social authority against
which appropriateness (what is right or
wrong) of an individual's behavior is
judged.
5. MEANING:
*This has to
do with
survival,
health and
well-being.
*this refers mainly to
human's need which
come from his bodily
space-time limitations.
*It is concerned with
techniques if healing and
health, of work,
production and
organization.
I. TECHNICAL NORM
6. Definition
This has to do
with the need
for group
cohesion and for
strengthening
the bonds that
keep the
community
together.
-A norm is a group-held belief about
how members should behave in a
given context.
-Sociologists describe norms
as informal understandings
that govern society’s
behaviors,
The psychological definition
emphasizes that this is having two
dimensions: how much behavior is
exhibited and how much the group
approves of that behavior.
II. Societal Norm
8. Definition:
In community life, this norm combines with religion
which is sometimes called “ethic-religious norm”
This refers to some ideal, Vision of man,
and ideal stage perfection of man, which
serve as an ultimate goals and norms In
relation to moral norm, man and his
actions are judge to be right or wrong,
good and bad.
IV. Ethical or Moral Norm
9. It is also
constantly present
and manifest to
all humankind.
The ultimate
norm of morality
is the divine
nature.
Human nature is the
proximate norm of
morality because it is
common to
everyone, and the
rules derived from it
will be applicable to
all human beings.
IV. Ethical or Moral Norm
10. the ultimate norm of
human morality is the
nature and activity of
God.
A person is as good
as his or her
character
approximates the
perfections of God;
and his or her
conduct is as good as
it imitates the activity
of God.
This resemblance
between God and
creatures--
including human
beings--should be
not only in nature
(who God is) but
also in action (how
God acts).