NY State Dignity Act


🛡️ New York State Dignity Act

The Dignity Act is addressed at the beginning of all assemblies. Children are encouraged to sing into a microphone in front of their classmates throughout the show. Sometimes classmates will laugh, point, or ridicule a child when they are singing or acting. This becomes a teaching moment where students will learn to resist the temptation to make fun of another child.

Students not only learn to appreciate cultural diversity through music and literature (Standard 4), they experience playing the parts of the characters in each of the songs during the show. Lee’s Anti-Bullying “Be a Friend, Not a Bully” Show supports the Dignity Act, and the Black History and US Presidents Shows refer to a history of the pursuit of dignity in our country.

Lee explains how we all live with some sort of bullying, but we can choose not to spread it around! The very popular anti-bullying book Mean Jean, the Recess Queen is used for this purpose. Lee incorporates an exercise in body language, and has the students experience “inviting and welcoming” body language as opposed to “off-putting or unfriendly” body language.

💬 Favorite Quote from Peter Yarrow

“The belief is that music will become an antibiotic to the kind of hostility and violence that kids are visiting on each other in a world filled with hatred and fear. The songs themselves are only part of the program; it’s the act of singing them together that really completes this process of connection. It only works when everyone participates. Something very special and almost magical happens in a room filled with people who are singing together.”

Peter Yarrow, St. Louis Seminar